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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:11:11 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:11:11 -0700
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica, Volume VII Slice IX - Dagupan to David.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition,
+Volume 7, Slice 9, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 9
+ "Dagupan" to "David"
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38799]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="10" style="background-color: #dcdcdc; color: #696969; " summary="Transcriber's note">
+<tr>
+<td style="width:25%; vertical-align:top">
+Transcriber&rsquo;s note:
+</td>
+<td class="norm">
+A few typographical errors have been corrected. They
+appear in the text <span class="correction" title="explanation will pop up">like this</span>, and the
+explanation will appear when the mouse pointer is moved over the marked
+passage. Sections in Greek will yield a transliteration
+when the pointer is moved over them, and words using diacritic characters in the
+Latin Extended Additional block, which may not display in some fonts or browsers, will
+display an unaccented version. <br /><br />
+<a name="artlinks">Links to other EB articles:</a> Links to articles residing in other EB volumes will
+be made available when the respective volumes are introduced online.
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<div style="padding-top: 3em; ">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<h2>THE ENCYCLOP&AElig;DIA BRITANNICA</h2>
+
+<h2>A DICTIONARY OF ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE AND GENERAL INFORMATION</h2>
+
+<h3>ELEVENTH EDITION</h3>
+<div style="padding-top: 3em; ">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h3>VOLUME VII SLICE IX<br /><br />
+Dagupan to David</h3>
+<hr class="full" />
+<div style="padding-top: 3em; ">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<p class="center1" style="font-size: 150%; font-family: 'verdana';">Articles in This Slice</p>
+<table class="reg" style="width: 90%; font-size: 90%; border: gray 2px solid;" cellspacing="8" summary="Contents">
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar1">DAGUPAN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar100">DANDY</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar2">DAHABEAH</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar101">DANEGELD</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar3">DAHL, HANS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar102">DANELAGH</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar4">DAHL, JOHANN CHRISTIAN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar103">DANGERFIELD, THOMAS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar5">DAHL, MICHAEL</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar104">DANIEL</a> (biblical figure)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar6">DAHL, VLADIMIR IVANOVICH</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar105">DANIEL</a> (Russian travel-writer)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar7">DAHLBERG, ERIK JOHANSEN, COUNT</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar106">DANIEL, GABRIEL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar8">DAHLGREN, JOHN ADOLF</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar107">DANIEL, SAMUEL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar9">DAHLGREN, KARL FREDRIK</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar108">DANIELL, JOHN FREDERIC</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar10">DAHLIA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar109">DANIELL, THOMAS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar11">DAHLMANN, FRIEDRICH CHRISTOPH</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar110">DANNAT, WILLIAM T.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar12">DAHLSTJERNA, GUNNO</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar111">DANNECKER, JOHANN HEINRICH VON</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar13">DAHN, JULIUS SOPHUS FELIX</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar112">DANNEWERK</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar14">DAHOMEY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar113">DANSVILLE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar15">DAILLÉ, JEAN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar114">DANTE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar16">DAIRY and DAIRY-FARMING</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar115">DANTON, GEORGE JACQUES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar17">DAIS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar116">DANUBE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar18">DAISY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar117">DANVERS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar19">DAKAR</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar118">DANVILLE</a> (Illinois, U.S.A.)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar20">DALAGUETE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar119">DANVILLE</a> (Kentucky, U.S.A.)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar21">DALBEATTIE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar120">DANVILLE</a> (Pennsylvania, U.S.A.)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar22">DALBERG</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar121">DANVILLE</a> (Virginia, U.S.A.)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar23">DALE, ROBERT WILLIAM</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar122">DANZIG</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar24">DALE, SIR THOMAS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar123">DAPHLA HILLS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar25">DALECARLIA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar124">DAPHNAE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar26">DALGAIRNS, JOHN DOBREE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar125">DAPHNE</a> (Greek mythology)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar27">DALGARNO, GEORGE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar126">DAPHNE</a> (genus of shrubs)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar28">DALHOUSIE, JAMES ANDREW BROUN RAMSAY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar127">DAPHNEPHORIA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar29">DALHOUSIE, FOX MAULE RAMSAY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar128">DAPHNIS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar30">DALIN, OLOF VON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar129">DARÁB</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar31">DALKEITH</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar130">DARBHANGA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar32">DALKEY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar131">D&rsquo;ARBLAY, FRANCES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar33">DALLAS, ALEXANDER JAMES</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar132">DARBOY, GEORGES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar34">DALLAS, GEORGE MIFFLIN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar133">DARCY, THOMAS DARCY</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar35">DALLAS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar134">DARDANELLES</a> (strait)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar36">DALLE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar135">DARDANELLES</a> (town)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar37">DALLIN, CYRUS EDWIN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar136">DARDANUS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar38">DALLING AND BULWER, WILLIAM HENRY LYTTON EARLE BULWER</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar137">DARDISTAN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar39">DALLMEYER, JOHN HENRY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar138">DARES PHRYGIUS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar40">DALL&rsquo; ONGARO, FRANCESCO</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar139">DAR-ES-SALAAM</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar41">DALMATIA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar140">DARESTE DE LA CHAVANNE, ANTOINE ELISABETH CLÉOPHAS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar42">DALMATIC</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar141">DARESTE DE LA CHAVANNE, RODOLPHE MADELEINE CLÉOPHAS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar43">DALMELLINGTON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar142">DARFUR</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar44">DALOU, JULES</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar143">DARGAI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar45">DALRADIAN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar144">DARGOMIJSKY, ALEXANDER SERGEIVICH</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar46">DALRIADA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar145">DARIAL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar47">DALRY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar146">DARIEN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar48">DALTON, JOHN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar147">DARIUS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar49">DALTON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar148">DARJEELING</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar50">DALTON-IN-FURNESS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar149">DARLEY, GEORGE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar51">DALY, AUGUSTIN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar150">DARLING, GRACE HORSLEY</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar52">DALYELL, THOMAS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar151">DARLING</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar53">DAM</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar152">DARLINGTON</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar54">DAMAGES</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar153">DARLINGTONIA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar55">DAMANH&#362;R</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar154">DARLY, MATTHIAS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar56">DAMARALAND</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar155">DARMESTETER, JAMES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar57">DAMASCENING</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar156">DARMSTADT</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar58">DAMASCIUS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar157">DARNLEY, HENRY STEWART</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar59">DAMASCUS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar158">DARRANG</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar60">DAMASK</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar159">DARTFORD</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar61">DAMASK STEEL</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar160">DARTMOOR</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar62">DAMASUS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar161">DARTMOUTH</a> (town of Canada)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar63">DAMAUN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar162">DARTMOUTH</a> (town of England)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar64">DAME</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar163">DARTMOUTH COLLEGE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar65">DAME&rsquo;S VIOLET</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar164">DARTMOUTH, EARL OF</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar66">DAMGHAN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar165">DARU, PIERRE ANTOINE NOËL BRUNO</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar67">DAMIANI, PIETRO</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar166">DARWEN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar68">DAMIEN, FATHER</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar167">DARWIN, CHARLES ROBERT</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar69">DAMIENS, ROBERT FRANÇOIS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar168">DARWIN, ERASMUS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar70">DAMIETTA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar169">DASENT, SIR GEORGE WEBBE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar71">DAMIRI</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar170">DASHKOV, CATHERINA ROMANOVNA VORONTSOV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar72">DAMIRON, JEAN PHILIBERT</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar171">DASS, PETTER</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar73">DAMJANICH, JÁNOS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar172">DASYURE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar74">DAMMAR</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar173">DATE PALM</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar75">DAMMARTIN</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar174">DATIA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar76">DAMME</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar175">DATIVE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar77">DAMOCLES</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar176">DATOLITE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar78">DAMOH</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar177">DAUB, KARL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar79">DAMON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar178">DAUBENTON, LOUIS-JEAN-MARIE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar80">DAMOPHON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar179">DAUBENY, CHARLES GILES BRIDLE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar81">DAMP</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar180">DAUBIGNY, CHARLES FRANÇOIS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar82">DAMPIER, WILLIAM</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar181">DAUBRÉE, GABRIEL AUGUSTE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar83">DAN</a> (tribe of Israel)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar182">DAUDET, ALPHONSE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar84">DAN</a> (town of ancient Israel)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar183">DAULATABAD</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar85">DANA, CHARLES ANDERSON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar184">DAUMIER, HONORÉ</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar86">DANA, FRANCIS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar185">DAUN (DHAUN), LEOPOLD JOSEF</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar87">DANA, JAMES DWIGHT</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar186">DAUNOU, PIERRE CLAUDE FRANÇOIS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar88">DANAE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar187">DAUPHIN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar89">DANAO</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar188">DAUPHINÉ</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar90">DANAUS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar189">DAURAT, JEAN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar91">DANBURITE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar190">DAVENANT, CHARLES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar92">DANBURY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar191">DAVENANT, SIR WILLIAM</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar93">DANBY, FRANCIS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar192">DAVENPORT, EDWARD LOOMIS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar94">DANCE</a> (English family)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar193">DAVENPORT, ROBERT</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar95">DANCE</a> (dancing)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar194">DAVENPORT</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar96">DANCOURT, FLORENT CARTON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar195">DAVENTRY</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar97">DANDELION</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar196">DAVEY OF FERNHURST, HORACE DAVEY</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar98">DANDOLO</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar197">DAVID</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar99">DANDOLO, VINCENZO</a></td> <td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page731" id="page731"></a>731</span></p>
+<p><span class="bold">DAGUPAN,<a name="ar1" id="ar1"></a></span> a town and the most important commercial centre
+of the province of Pangasinán, Luzon, Philippine Islands, on a
+branch of the Agno river near its entrance into the Gulf of
+Lingayen, 120 m. by rail N.N.W. of Manila. Pop. (1903), 20,357.
+It is served by the Manila &amp; Dagupan railway. Dagupan has a
+healthy climate. It is the chief point of exportation for a very
+rich province, which produces sugar, indigo, Indian corn, copra,
+and especially rice. There are several rice mills here. Salt is an
+important export, being manufactured in salt water swamps and
+marshes throughout the province of Pangasinán (whose name,
+from <i>asin</i>, &ldquo;salt,&rdquo; means &ldquo;the place where salt is produced&rdquo;).
+In these, marshes grows the nipa palm, from which a liquor is
+distilled&mdash;there are a number of small distilleries here. Dagupan
+has a small shipyard in which sailing vessels and steam launches
+are constructed. The principal language is Pangasinán.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHABEAH<a name="ar2" id="ar2"></a></span> (also spelt dahab&#299;ya, dahab&#299;yeh, dahabeeyah,
+&amp;c.), an Arabic word (variously derived from <i>dahab</i>, gold, and
+<i>dahab</i>, one of the forms of the verb to go) for a native passenger
+boat used on the Nile. The typical form is that of a barge-like
+house-boat provided with sails, resembling the painted galleys
+represented on the tombs of the Pharaohs. Similar state barges
+were used by the Mahommedan rulers of Egypt, and from the
+circumstance that these vessels were ornamented with gilding is
+attributed the usual derivation of the name from gold. Before
+the introduction of steamers dahabeahs were generally used by
+travellers ascending the Nile, and they are still the favourite
+means of travelling for the leisured and wealthy classes. The
+modern dahabeah is often made of iron, draws about 2 ft. of
+water, and is provided with one very large and one small sail.
+According to size it provides accommodation for from two to a
+dozen passengers. Steam dahabeahs are also built to meet the
+requirements of tourists.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHL, HANS<a name="ar3" id="ar3"></a></span> (1840-&emsp;&emsp;), Norwegian painter, was born at
+Hardanger. After being in the Swedish army he studied art at
+Karlsruhe and at Düsseldorf, being a notable painter of landscape
+and <i>genre</i>. His work has considerable humour, but his colouring
+is hard and rather crude. In 1889 he settled in Berlin. His
+pictures are very popular in Norway.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHL, JOHANN CHRISTIAN<a name="ar4" id="ar4"></a></span> (1778-1857), Norwegian landscape
+painter, was born in Bergen. He formed his style without
+much tuition, remaining at Bergen till he was twenty-four,
+when he left for the better field of Copenhagen, and ultimately
+settled in Dresden in 1818. He is usually included in the German
+school, although he was thus close on forty years of age when he
+finally took up his abode in Dresden, where he was quickly
+received into the Academy and became professor. German
+landscape-painting was not greatly advanced at that time, and
+Dahl contributed to improve it. He continued to reside in
+Dresden, though he travelled into Tirol and in Italy, painting
+many pictures, one of his best being that of the &ldquo;Outbreak of
+Vesuvius, 1820.&rdquo; He was fond of extraordinary effects, as seen
+in his &ldquo;Winter at Munich,&rdquo; and his &ldquo;Dresden by Moonlight;&rdquo;
+also the &ldquo;Haven of Copenhagen,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Schloss of Friedrichsburg,&rdquo;
+under the same condition. At Dresden may be seen
+many of his works, notably a large picture called &ldquo;Norway,&rdquo;
+and a &ldquo;Storm at Sea.&rdquo; He was received into several academic
+bodies, and had the orders of Wasa and St Olaf sent him by the
+king of Norway and Sweden.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHL, MICHAEL<a name="ar5" id="ar5"></a></span> (1656-1743), Swedish portrait painter, was
+born at Stockholm. He received his first professional education
+from Ernst Klocke, who had a respectable position in that
+northern town, which, however, Dahl left in his twenty-second
+year. His first destination was England, where he did not long
+remain, but crossed over to Paris, and made his way at last to
+Rome, there taking up his abode for a considerable time, painting
+the portraits of Queen Christina and other celebrities. In 1688
+he returned to England, and became for some years a dangerous
+rival to Kneller. He died in London. His portraits still exist
+in many houses, but his name is not always preserved with them.
+Nagler (<i>Künstler-Lexicon</i>) says those at Hampton Court and at
+Petworth contest the palm with those of the better known and
+vastly more employed painter.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHL<a name="ar6" id="ar6"></a></span> (or <b>DALE</b>), <b>VLADIMIR IVANOVICH</b> (1802-1872),
+Russian author and philologist, was born of Scandinavian parentage
+in 1802, and received his education at the naval cadets&rsquo; institution
+at St Petersburg. He joined the Black Sea fleet in 1819;
+but at a later date he entered the military service, and was thus
+engaged in the Polish campaign of 1831, and in the expedition
+against Khiva. He was afterwards appointed to a medical post
+in one of the government hospitals at St Petersburg, and was
+ultimately transferred to a situation in the civil service. The
+latter years of his life were spent at Moscow, and he died there on
+November 3 (October 22), 1872. Under the name of Kossack
+Lugansky he obtained considerable fame by his stories of Russian
+life:&mdash;<i>The Dream and the Waking</i>, <i>A Story of Misery</i>, <i>Happiness,
+and Truth</i>, <i>The Door-Keeper</i> (Dvernik), <i>The Officer&rsquo;s Valet</i>
+(Denshchik). His greatest work, however, was a <i>Dictionary of
+the Living Russian Tongue</i> (Tolkovyi Slovar Zhivago Velikorusskago
+Yasika), which appeared in four volumes between 1861
+and 1866, and is of the most essential service to the student of
+the popular literature and folk-lore of Russia. It was based on
+the results of his own investigations throughout the various
+provinces of Russia,&mdash;investigations which had furnished him
+with no fewer than 4000 popular tales and upwards of 30,000
+proverbs. Among his other publications may be mentioned
+<i>Bemerkungen zu Zimmermann&rsquo;s Entwurf des Kriegstheaters
+Russlands gegen Khiwa</i>, published in German at Orenburg, and a
+<i>Handbook of Botany</i> (Moscow, 1849).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>A collected edition of his works appeared at St Petersburg in
+8 volumes, 1860-1861.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHLBERG<a name="ar7" id="ar7"></a></span> (<span class="sc">Dahlbergh</span>), <b>ERIK JOHANSEN, COUNT</b> (1625-1703),
+Swedish soldier and engineer, was born at Stockholm.
+His early studies took the direction of the science of fortification,
+and as an engineer officer he saw service in the latter years of the
+Thirty Years&rsquo; War, and in Poland. As adjutant-general and
+engineer adviser to Charles X. (Gustavus), he had a great share
+in the famous crossing of the frozen Belts, and at the sieges of
+Copenhagen and Kronborg he directed the engineers. In spite
+of these distinguished services, Dahlberg remained an obscure
+lieutenant-colonel for many years. His patriotism, however,
+proved superior to the tempting offers Charles II. of England
+made to induce him to enter the British service, though, in that
+age of professional soldiering, there was nothing in the offer that
+a man of honour could not accept. At last his talents were
+recognized, and in 1676 he became director-general of fortifications.
+In the wars of the next twenty-five years Dahlberg again
+rendered distinguished service, alike in attack (as at Helsingborg
+in 1677, and Dünamünde in 1700) and defence (as in the two
+sieges of Riga in 1700): and his work in repairing the fortresses
+of his own country, not less important, earned for him the title
+of the &ldquo;Vauban of Sweden.&rdquo; He was also the founder of the
+Swedish engineer corps. He retired as field-marshal in 1702, and
+died the following year.</p>
+
+<p>Erik Dahlberg was responsible for the fine collection of
+drawings called <i>Suecia antiqua et hodierna</i> (Stockholm, 1660-1716;
+2nd edition, 1856; 3rd edition, 1864-1865), and assisted
+Pufendorf in his <i>Histoire de Charles X Gustave</i>. He wrote a
+memoir of his life (to be found in Svenska Bibliotek, 1757) and an
+account of the campaigns of Charles X. (ed. Lundblad, Stockholm,
+1823).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHLGREN, JOHN ADOLF<a name="ar8" id="ar8"></a></span> (1809-1870), admiral in the U.S.
+navy, was the son of the Swedish consul at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page732" id="page732"></a>732</span>
+and was born in that city on the 13th of November 1809.
+He entered the United States navy in 1826, and saw some service
+in the Civil War in command of the South Atlantic blockading
+squadron. But he was chiefly notable as a scientific officer.
+His knowledge of mathematics caused him to be employed on
+the coast survey in 1834. In 1837 his eyesight threatened to
+fail, he retired in 1838-1842, and in 1847 he was transferred
+to the ordnance department. In this post he applied himself
+to the improvement of the guns of the U.S. navy. He was the
+inventor of the smooth bore gun which bore his name, but was
+from its shape familiarly known as &ldquo;the soda water bottle.&rdquo;
+It was used in the Civil War, and for several years afterwards in
+the United States navy. Dahlgren&rsquo;s guns were first mounted
+in a vessel named the &ldquo;Experiment,&rdquo; which cruised under his
+command from 1857 till 1859. They were &ldquo;the first practical
+application of results obtained by experimental determinations
+of pressure at different points along the bore, by Colonel Bomford&rsquo;s
+tests&mdash;that is by boring holes in the walls of the gun,
+through which the pressure acts upon other bodies, such as
+pistol balls, pistons, &amp;c.&rdquo; (Cf. article by J. M. Brooke in
+Hamersley&rsquo;s <i>Naval Encyclopaedia</i>.) When the Civil War broke
+out, he was on ordnance duty in the Washington navy yard,
+and he was one of the three officers who did not resign from
+confederate sympathies. His rank at the time was commander,
+and the command could only by held by a captain. President
+Lincoln insisted on retaining Commander Dahlgren, and he was
+qualified to keep the post by special act of Congress. He became
+post-captain in 1862 and rear-admiral in 1863. He commanded
+the Washington navy yard when he died on the 12th of July 1870.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>A memoir of Admiral Dahlgren by his widow was published at
+Boston in 1882.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(D. H.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHLGREN, KARL FREDRIK<a name="ar9" id="ar9"></a></span> (1791-1844), Swedish poet,
+was born at Stensbruk in Östergötland on the 20th of June 1791.
+At a time when literary partisanship ran high in Sweden, and the
+writers divided themselves into &ldquo;Goths&rdquo; and &ldquo;Phosphorists,&rdquo;
+Dahlgren made himself indispensable to the Phosphorists by his
+polemical activity. In the mock-heroic poem of <i>Markalls
+sömnlösa nätter</i> (Markall&rsquo;s Sleepless Nights), in which the Phosphorists
+ridiculed the academician Per Adam Wallmark and
+others, Dahlgren, who was a genuine humorist, took a prominent
+part. In 1825 he published <i>Babels Torn</i> (The Tower of Babel), a
+satire, and a comedy, <i>Argus in Olympen</i>; and in 1828 two
+volumes of poems. In 1829 he was appointed to an ecclesiastical
+post in Stockholm, which he held until his death. In a series of
+odes and dithyrambic pieces, entitled <i>Mollbergs Epistlar</i> (1819,
+1820), he strove to emulate the wonderful lyric genius of K. M.
+Bellman, of whom he was a student and follower. From 1825 to
+1827 he edited a critical journal entitled <i>Kometen</i> (The Comet),
+and in company with Almqvist he founded the <i>Manhemsförbund</i>,
+a short-lived society of agricultural socialists. In 1834
+he collected his poems in one volume; and in 1837 appeared his
+last book, <i>Angbåts-Sånger</i> (Steamboat Songs). On the 1st of
+May 1844 he died at Stockholm. Dahlgren is one of the best
+humorous writers that Sweden has produced; but he was perhaps
+at his best in realistic and idyllic description. His little poem of
+<i>Zephyr and the Girl</i>, which is to be found in every selection from
+Swedish poetry, is a good example of his sensuous and ornamented
+style.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>His works were collected and published after his death by A. J.
+Arwidsson (5 vols., Stockholm, 1847-1852).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHLIA,<a name="ar10" id="ar10"></a></span> a genus of herbaceous plants of the natural order
+Compositae, so called after Dr Dahl, a pupil of Linnaeus. The
+genus contains about nine species indigenous in the high sandy
+plains of Mexico. The dahlia was first introduced into Britain
+from Spain in 1789 by the marchioness of Bute. The species was
+probably <i>D. variabilis</i>, whence by far the majority of the forms
+now common have originated. The flowers, at the time of the
+first introduction of the plant, were single, with a yellow disk
+and dull scarlet rays; under cultivation since the beginning of
+the 19th century in France and England, flowers of numerous
+brilliant hues have been produced. The flower has been modified
+also from a flat to a globular shape, and the arrangement of the
+florets has been rendered quite distinct in the ranunculus and
+anemone-like kinds. The ordinary natural height of the dahlia
+is about 7 or 8 ft., but one of the dwarf races grows to only 18 in.
+With changes in the flower, changes in the shape of the seed
+have been brought about by cultivation; varieties of the plant
+have been produced which require more moisture than others;
+and the period of flowering has been made considerably earlier.
+In 1808 dahlias were described as flowering from September to
+November, but some of the dwarf varieties at present grown are
+in full blossom in the middle of June.</p>
+
+<p>The large number of varieties may be classed as under the
+following heads: (1) <i>Single dahlias</i>. These have been derived
+from <i>D. coccinea</i>; they have a disk of tubular florets surrounded
+by the large showy ray florets. (2) <i>Show dahlias</i>, large and double
+with flowers self-coloured or pale-coloured and edged or tipped
+with a darker colour. (3) <i>Fancy dahlias</i>, resembling the show
+but having the florets striped or tipped with a second tint. (4)
+<i>Bouquet</i> or <i>Pompon dahlias</i>, with much smaller double flowers
+of various colours. (5) <i>Cactus dahlias</i>, derived from D. Juarezi, a
+form which has given rise to a beautiful race with pointed starry
+flowers. (6) <i>Paeony-flowered dahlias</i>, a new but not pretty race,
+with large floppy heads, broad florets and several disk florets in
+centre.</p>
+
+<p>New varieties are procured from seed, which should be sown in
+pots or pans towards the end of March, and placed in a hotbed or
+propagating pit, the young plants being pricked off into pots or
+boxes, and gradually hardened off for planting out in June; they
+will flower the same season if the summer is a genial one. The
+older varieties are propagated by dividing the large tuberous
+roots, in doing which care must be taken to leave an eye to each
+portion of tuber, otherwise it will not grow. Rare varieties are
+sometimes grafted on the roots of others. The best and most
+general mode of propagation is by cuttings, to obtain which, the
+old tubers are placed in heat in February, and as the young
+shoots, which rise freely from them, attain the height of 3 in.,
+they are taken off with a heel, and planted singly in small pots
+filled with fine sandy soil, and plunged in a moderate heat. They
+root speedily, and are then transferred to larger pots in light rich
+soil, and their growth encouraged until the planting-out season
+arrives, about the middle of June north of the Thames.</p>
+
+<p>Dahlias succeed best in an open situation, and in rich deep
+loam, but there is scarcely any garden soil in which they will not
+thrive, if it is manured. For the production of fine show flowers
+the ground must be deeply trenched, and well manured annually.
+The branches as well as the blossoms require a considerable but
+judicious amount of thinning; they also need shading in some
+cases. The plants should be protected from cold winds, and
+when watered the whole of the foliage should be wetted. They
+may stand singly like common border flowers, but have the most
+imposing appearance when seen in masses arranged according to
+their height. Florists usually devote a plot of ground to them,
+and plant them in lines 5 to 10 ft. apart. This is done about the
+beginning of June, sheltering them if necessary from late frosts
+by inverted pots or in some other convenient way. Old roots
+often throw up a multitude of stems, which render thinning
+necessary. As the plants increase in height, they are furnished
+with strong stakes, to secure them from high winds. Dahlias
+flower on till they are interrupted by frost in autumn. The roots
+are then taken up, dried, and stored in a cellar, or some other
+place where they may be secure from frost and moisture. Earwigs
+are very destructive, eating out the young buds and florets.
+Small flower-pots half filled with dry moss and inverted on stakes
+placed among the branches, form a useful trap.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHLMANN, FRIEDRICH CHRISTOPH<a name="ar11" id="ar11"></a></span> (1785-1860), German
+historian and politician, was born on the 13th of May 1785;
+he came of an old Hanseatic family of Wismar, which then
+belonged to Sweden. His father, who was the burgomaster of
+the town, intended him to study theology, but his bent was
+towards classical philology, and this he studied from 1802 to
+1806 at the universities of Copenhagen and Halle, and again at
+Copenhagen. After finishing his studies, he translated some of
+the Greek tragic poets, and the <i>Clouds</i> of Aristophanes. But he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page733" id="page733"></a>733</span>
+was also interested in modern literature and philosophy; and
+the troubles of the times, of which he had personal experience,
+aroused in him, as in so many of his contemporaries, a strong
+feeling of German patriotism, though throughout his life he was
+always proud of his connexion with Scandinavia, and Gustavus
+Adolphus was his particular hero. In 1809, on the news of the
+outbreak of war in Austria, Dahlmann, together with the poet
+Heinrich von Kleist, whom he had met in Dresden, went to
+Bohemia, and was afterwards with the Imperial army, up till
+the battle of Aspern, with the somewhat vague object of trying
+to convert the Austrian war into a German one. This hope was
+shattered by the defeat of Wagram. He now decided to try his
+fortunes in Denmark, where he had influential relations. After
+taking his doctor&rsquo;s degree at Wittenberg (1810) he qualified at
+Copenhagen in 1811, with an essay on the origins of the ancient
+theatre, as a lecturer on ancient literature and history, on which
+he delivered lectures in Latin. His influential friends soon
+brought him further advancement. As early as 1812 he was
+summoned to Kiel, as successor to the historian Dietrich Hermann
+Hegewisch (1746-1812). This appointment was in two
+respects a decisive moment in his career; on the one hand it
+made him give his whole attention to a subject for which he
+was admirably suited, but to which he had so far given only a
+secondary interest; and on the other hand, it threw him into
+politics.</p>
+
+<p>In 1815 he obtained, in addition to his professorate, the
+position of secretary to the perpetual deputation of the estates of
+Schleswig-Holstein. In this capacity he began, by means of
+memoirs or of articles in the <i>Kieler Blätter</i>, which he founded
+himself, to appear as an able and zealous champion of the
+half-forgotten rights of the Elbe duchies, as against Denmark,
+and of their close connexion with Germany. It was he upon
+whom the Danes afterwards threw the blame of having invented
+the Schleswig-Holstein question; certainly his <span class="correction" title="amended from activites">activities</span> form
+an important link in the chain of events which eventually led
+to the solution of 1864. So far as this interest affected himself,
+the chief profit lay in the fact that it deepened his conception
+of the state, and directed it to more practical ends. Whereas
+at that time mere speculation dominated both the French
+Liberalism of the school of Rotteck, and Karl Ludwig von
+Haller&rsquo;s Romanticist doctrine of the Christian state, Dahlmann
+took as his premisses the circumstances as he found them,
+and evolved the new out of the old by a quiet process of development.
+Moreover, in the inevitable conflict with the Danish
+crown his upright point of view and his German patriotism were
+further confirmed. After his transference to Göttingen in 1829
+he had the opportunity of working in the same spirit. As
+confidant of the duke of Cambridge, he was allowed to take a
+share in framing the Hanoverian constitution of 1833, which
+remodelled the old aristocratic government in a direction which
+had become inevitable since the July revolution in Paris; and
+when in 1837 the new king Ernest Augustus declared the constitution
+invalid, it was Dahlmann who inspired the famous
+protest of the seven professors of Göttingen. He was deprived
+of his position and banished, but he had the satisfaction of
+knowing that German national feeling received a mighty impulse
+from his courageous action, while public subscriptions prevented
+him from material cares.</p>
+
+<p>After he had lived for several years in Leipzig and Jena, King
+Frederick William IV. appointed him in October 1842 to a
+professorship at Bonn. The years that followed were those of
+his highest celebrity. His <i>Politik</i> (1835) had already made him
+a great name as a writer; he now published his <i>Dänische
+Geschichte</i> (1840-1843), a historical work of the first rank; and
+this was soon followed by histories of the English and French
+revolutions, which, though of less scientific value, exercised a
+decisive influence upon public opinion by their open advocacy
+of the system of constitutional monarchy. As a teacher too he
+was much beloved. Though no orator, and in spite of a personality
+not particularly amiable or winning, he produced a profound
+impression upon young men by the pregnancy of his expression,
+a consistent logical method of thought based on Kant and by
+the manliness of his character. When the revolution of 1848
+broke out, the &ldquo;father of German nationality,&rdquo; as the provisional
+government at Milan called him, found himself the centre
+of universal interest. Both Mecklenburg and Prussia offered
+him in vain the post of envoy to the diet of the confederation.
+Naturally, too, he was elected to the national assembly at
+Frankfort, and took a leading part in the constitutional committees
+appointed first by the diet, then by the parliament. His
+object was to make Germany as far as possible a united constitutional
+monarchy, with the exclusion of the whole of Austria, or
+at least, of its non-German parts. Prussia was to provide the
+emperor, but at the same time&mdash;and in this lay the doctrinaire
+weakness of the system&mdash;was to give up its separate existence,
+consecrated by history, in the same way as the other states.
+When, therefore, Frederick William IV., without showing any
+anxiety to bind himself by the conditions laid down at Frankfort,
+concluded with Denmark the seven months&rsquo; truce of Malmö
+(26th August 1848), Dahlmann proposed that the national
+parliament should refuse to recognize the truce, with the express
+intention of clearing up once for all the relations of the parliament
+with the court of Berlin. The motion was passed by a
+small majority (September 5th); but the members of Dahlmann&rsquo;s
+party were just those who voted against it, and it was
+they who on the 17th of September reversed the previous vote
+and passed a resolution accepting the truce, after Dahlmann had
+failed to form a ministry on the basis of the resolution of the 5th,
+owing to his objection to the Radicals. Dahlmann afterwards
+described this as the decisive turning-point in the fate of the
+parliament. He did not, however, at once give up all hope.
+Though he took but little active part in parliamentary debates,
+he was very active on commissions and in party conferences,
+and it was largely owing to him that a German constitution was
+at last evolved, and that Frederick William IV. was elected
+hereditary emperor (28th of March 1849). He was accordingly
+one of the deputation which offered the crown to the king in
+Berlin. The king&rsquo;s refusal was less of a surprise to him than to
+most of his colleagues. He counted on being able to compel
+recognition of the constitution by the moral pressure of the
+consent of the people. It was only when the attitude of the
+Radicals made it clear to him that this course would lead to a
+revolution, that he decided, after a long struggle, to retire from
+the national parliament (21st May). He was still, however, one
+of the chief promoters of the well-known conference of the
+imperial party at Gotha, the proceedings of which were not,
+however, satisfactory to him; and he took part in the sessions
+of the first Prussian chamber (1849-1850) and of the parliament
+of Erfurt (1850). But finally, convinced that for the moment
+all efforts towards the unity of Germany were unavailing, he
+retired from political life, though often pressed to stand for
+election, and again took up his work of teaching at Bonn. His
+last years were, however, saddened by illness, bereavement and
+continual friction with his colleagues. His death took place on
+the 5th of December 1860, following on an apoplectic fit. He was
+a man whose personality had contributed to the progress of the
+world, and whose teaching was to continue to exercise a far-reaching
+influence on the development of German affairs.</p>
+
+<p>His chief works were:&mdash;<i>Quellenkunde der deutschen Geschichte
+nach der Folge der Begebenheiten geordnet</i> (1830, 7th edition of
+Dahlmann-Waitz, <i>Quellenkunde</i>, Leipzig, 1906); <i>Politik, auf
+den Grund und das Mass der gegebenen Zustände zurückgeführt</i>
+(1 vol., 1835); <i>Geschichte Dänemarks</i> (3 vols., 1840-1843);
+<i>Geschichte der englischen Revolution</i> (1844); <i>Geschichte der
+französischen Revolution</i> (1845).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See A. Springer, <i>Friedrich Christoph Dahlmann</i> (2 vols., 1870-1872);
+and H. v. Treitschke, <i>Histor. und polit. Aufsätze</i>, i. 365
+et seq.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(F. Lu.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHLSTJERNA, GUNNO<a name="ar12" id="ar12"></a></span> (1661-1709), Swedish poet, whose
+original surname was Eurelius, was born on the 7th of September
+1661 in the parish of Öhr in Dalsland, where his father was
+rector. He entered the university of Upsala in 1677, and after
+gaining his degree entered the government office of land-surveying.
+He was sent in 1681 on professional business to Livonia,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page734" id="page734"></a>734</span>
+then under Swedish rule. A dissertation read at Leipzig in 1687
+brought him the offer of a professorial chair in the university,
+which he refused. Returning to Sweden he executed commissions
+in land-surveying directed by King Charles XI., and in
+1699 he became head of the whole department. In 1702 he was
+ennobled under the name of Dahlstjerna. He wandered over
+the whole of the coast of the Baltic, Livonia, Rügen and
+Pomerania, preparing maps which still exist in the office of
+public land-surveying in Stockholm. His death, which took
+place in Pomerania on his forty-eighth birthday, 7th of September
+1709, is said to have been hastened by the disastrous news of
+the battle of Poltava. Dahlstjerna&rsquo;s patriotism was touching
+in its pathos and intensity, and during his long periods of professional
+exile he comforted himself by the composition of songs
+to his beloved Sweden. His genius was most irregular, but at
+his best he easily surpasses all the Swedish poets of his time.
+His best-known original work is <i>Kungaskald</i> (Stettin, 1697), an
+elegy on the death of Charles XI. It is written in alexandrines,
+arranged in <i>ottava rima</i>. The poem is pompous and allegorical,
+but there are passages full of melody and high thoughts.
+Dahlstjerna was a reformer in language, and it has been well
+said by Atterbom that in this poem &ldquo;he treats the Swedish
+speech just as dictatorially as Charles XI. and Charles XII.
+treated the Swedish nation.&rdquo; In 1690 was printed at Stettin
+his paraphrase of the <i>Pastor Fido</i> of Guarini. His most popular
+work is his <i>Götha kämpavisa om Konungen och Herr Peder</i> (The
+Goth&rsquo;s Battle Song, concerning the King and Master Peter;
+Stockholm, 1701). The King is Charles XII. and Master Peter
+is the tsar of Russia. This spirited ballad lived almost until our
+own days on the lips of the people as a folk-song.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The works of Dahlstjerna have been collected by P. Hanselli, in
+the <i>Samlade Vitterhetsarbeten af svenska Författare från Stjernhjelm
+till Dalin</i> (Upsala, 1856, &amp;c.).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHN, JULIUS SOPHUS FELIX<a name="ar13" id="ar13"></a></span> (1834-&emsp;&emsp;), German historian,
+jurist and poet, was born on the 9th of February 1834 in
+Hamburg, where his father, Friedrich Dahn (1811-1889), was a
+leading actor at the city theatre. His mother, Constance Dahn,
+née Le Gay, was a noted actress. In 1834 the family moved to
+Munich, where the parents took leading rôles in the classical
+German drama, until they retired from the stage: the mother
+in 1865 and the father in 1878. Felix Dahn studied law and
+philosophy in Munich and Berlin from 1849 to 1853. His first
+works were in jurisprudence, <i>Über die Wirkung der Klagverjährung
+bei Obligationen</i> (Munich, 1855), and <i>Studien zur Geschichte
+der germanischen Gottesurteile</i> (Munich, 1857). In 1857 he
+became docent in German law at Munich university, and in 1862
+professor-extraordinary, but in 1863 was called to Würzburg to
+a full professorship. In 1872 he removed to the university of
+Königsberg, and in 1888 settled at Breslau, becoming rector of
+the university in 1895. Meanwhile in addition to many legal
+works of high standing, he had begun the publication of that
+long series of histories and historical romances which has made
+his name a household word in Germany. The great history of
+the German migrations, <i>Die Könige der Germanen</i>, Bände i.-vi.
+(Munich and Würzburg, 1861-1870), Bände vii.-xi. (Leipzig,
+1894-1908), was a masterly study in constitutional history as
+well as a literary work of high merit, which carries the narrative
+down to the dissolution of the Carolingian empire. In his
+<i>Urgeschichte der germanischen und romanischen Völker</i> (Berlin,
+1881-1890), Dahn went a step farther back still, but here as in
+his <i>Geschichte der deutschen Urzeit</i> (Gotha, 1883-1888), a wealth of
+picturesque detail has been worked over and resolved into history
+with such imaginative insight and critical skill as to make real
+and present the indistinct beginnings of German society. Together
+with these larger works Dahn wrote many monographs
+and studies upon primitive German society. Many of his essays
+were collected in a series of six volumes entitled <i>Bausteine</i>
+(Berlin, 1879-1884). Not less important than his histories are
+the historical romances, the best-known of which, <i>Ein Kampf
+um Rom</i>, in four volumes (Leipzig, 1876), which has gone through
+many later editions, was also the first of the series. Others are
+<i>Odhins Trost</i> (Leipzig, 1880); <i>Die Kreuzfahrer</i> (Leipzig, 1884);
+<i>Odhins Rache</i> (Leipzig, 1891); <i>Julian der Abtrünnige</i> (Leipzig,
+1894), and one of the most popular, <i>Bis zum Tode getreu</i> (Leipzig,
+1887). The list is too long to be given in full, yet almost all are
+well-known. Parallel with this great production of learned and
+imaginative works, Dahn published some twenty small volumes
+of poetry. The most notable of these are the epics of the early
+German period. His wife Therese, <i>née</i> Freiin von Droste-Hülshoff,
+was joint-author with him of <i>Walhall, Germanische
+Götter und Heldensagen</i> (Leipzig, 1898).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>A collected edition of his works of fiction, both in prose and verse,
+has reached twenty-one volumes (Leipzig, 1898), and a new edition
+was published in 1901. Dahn also published four volumes of
+memoirs, <i>Erinnerungen</i> (Leipzig, 1890-1895).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAHOMEY<a name="ar14" id="ar14"></a></span> (Fr. <i>Dahomé</i>), a country of West Africa, formerly
+an independent kingdom, now a French colony. Dahomey is
+bounded S. by the Gulf of Guinea, E. by Nigeria (British), N.
+and N.W. by the French possessions on the middle Niger, and W.
+by the German colony of Togoland. The French colony extends
+far north of the limits of the ancient kingdom of the same name.
+With a coast-line of only 75 m. (1° 38&prime; E. to 2° 46&prime; 55&Prime; E.), the
+area of the colony is about 40,000 sq. m., and the population over
+1,000,000. As far as 9° N. the width of the colony is no greater
+than the coast-line. From this point, the colony broadens out both
+eastward and westward, attaining a maximum width of 200 m.
+It includes the western part of Borgu (q.v.), and reaches the Niger
+at a spot a little above Illo. Its greatest length N. to S. is 430 m.</p>
+
+<p><i>Physical Features.</i>&mdash;The littoral, part of the old Slave Coast
+(see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Guinea,</a></span>), is very low, sandy and obstructed by a bar.
+Behind the seashore is a line of lagoons, where small steamers
+can ply; east to west they are those of Porto Novo (or Lake
+Nokue), Whydah and Grand Popo. The Weme (300 m. long),
+known in its upper course as the Ofe, the most important river
+running south, drains the colony from the Bariba country to
+Porto Novo, entering the lagoon so named. The Zu is a western
+affluent of the Weme. Farther west is the Kuffu (150 m. long),
+which, before entering the Whydah lagoon, broadens out into a
+lake or lagoon called Ahémé, 20 m. long by 5 m. broad. The Makru
+and Kergigoto, each of which has various affluents, flow north-east
+to the Niger, which in the part of its course forming the
+north-east frontier of the colony is only navigable for small
+vessels and that with great difficulty (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Niger</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>For some 50 m. inland the country is flat, and, after the first
+mile or two of sandy waste is passed, covered with dense vegetation.
+At this distance (50 m.) from the coast is a great swamp
+known as the Lama Marsh. It extends east to west some 25 m.
+and north to south 6 to 9 m. North of the swamp the land rises
+by regular stages to about 1650 ft., the high plateau falling again
+to the basin of the Niger. In the north-west a range of hills
+known as the Atacora forms a watershed between the basins
+of the Weme, the Niger and the Volta. A large part of the interior
+consists of undulating country, rather barren, with occasional
+patches of forest. The forests contain the baobab, the coco-nut
+palm and the oil palm. The fauna resembles that of other
+parts of the West Coast, but the larger wild animals, such as the
+elephant and hippopotamus, are rare. The lion is found in the
+regions bordering the Niger. Some kinds of antelopes are
+common; the buffalo has disappeared.</p>
+
+<p><i>Climate.</i>&mdash;The climate of the coast regions is very hot and
+moist. Four seasons are well marked: the harmattan or long
+dry season, from the 1st December to the 15th March; the
+season of the great rains, from the 15th March to the 15th
+July; the short dry season, from the 15th July to the 15th
+September; and the &ldquo;little rains,&rdquo; from the 15th September
+to the 1st December. Near the sea the average temperature is
+about 80° F. The harmattan prevails for several days in succession,
+and alternates with winds from the south and south-west.
+During its continuance the thermometer falls about 10°,
+there is not the slightest moisture in the atmosphere, vegetation
+dries up or droops, the skin parches and peels, and all woodwork
+is liable to warp and crack with a loud report. Tornadoes occur
+occasionally. During nine months of the year the climate is
+tempered by a sea-breeze, which is felt as far inland as Abomey
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page735" id="page735"></a>735</span>
+(60 m.). It generally begins in the morning, and in the summer
+it often increases to a stiff gale at sundown. In the interior
+there are but two seasons: the dry season (November to May)
+and the rainy season (June to October). The rains are more
+scanty and diminish considerably in the northern regions.</p>
+
+<p><i>Inhabitants.</i>&mdash;The inhabitants of the coast region are of pure
+negro stock. The Dahomeyans (Dahomi), who inhabit the
+central part of the colony, form one of eighteen closely-allied
+clans occupying the country between the Volta and Porto Novo,
+and from their common tongue known as the Ewe-speaking
+tribes. In their own tongue Dahomeyans are called Fon or
+Fawin. They are tall and well-formed, proud, reserved in
+demeanour, polite in their intercourse with strangers, war-like
+and keen traders. The Mina, who occupy the district of the
+Popos, are noted for their skill as surf-men, which has gained for
+them the title of the Krumen of Dahomey. Porto Novo is inhabited
+by a tribe called Nago, which has an admixture of
+Yoruba blood and speaks a Yoruba dialect. The Nago are a
+peaceful tribe and even keener traders than the Dahomi. In
+Whydah and other coast towns are many mulattos, speaking
+Portuguese and bearing high-sounding Portuguese names. In
+the north the inhabitants&mdash;Mahi, Bariba, Gurmai,&mdash;are also of
+Negro stock, but scarcely so civilized as the coast tribes. Settled
+among them are communities of Fula and Hausas. There are
+many converts to Islam in the northern districts, but the Mahi
+and Dahomeyans proper are nearly all fetish worshippers.</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Towns.</i>&mdash;The chief port and the seat of government is
+Kotonu, the starting-point of a railway to the Niger. An iron
+pier, which extends well beyond the surf, affords facilities for
+shipping. Kotonu was originally a small village which served as
+the seaport of Porto Novo and was burnt to the ground in 1890.
+It has consequently the advantage of being a town laid out by
+Europeans on a definite plan. Situated on the beach between
+the sea and the lagoon of Porto Novo, the soil consists of heavy
+sand. Good hard roads have been made. Owing to an almost
+continuous, cool, westerly sea-breeze, Kotonu is, in comparison
+with the other coast towns, decidedly healthy for white men.
+Porto Novo (pop. about 50,000), the former French headquarters
+and chief business centre, is on the northern side of the lagoon
+of the same name and 20 m. north-east of Kotonu by water.
+The town has had many names, and that by which it is known
+to Europeans was given by the Portuguese in the 17th century.
+It contains numerous churches and mosques, public buildings
+and merchants&rsquo; residences. Whydah, 23 m. west of Kotonu,
+is an old and formerly thickly-populated town. Its population
+is now about 15,000. It is built on the north bank of the coast
+lagoon about 2 m. from the sea. There is no harbour at the
+beach, and landing is effected in boats made expressly to pass
+through the surf, here particularly heavy. Whydah, during the
+period of the slave-trade, was divided into five quarters: the
+English, French, Portuguese, Brazilian and native. The three
+first quarters once had formidable forts, of which the French
+fort alone survives. In consequence of the thousands of orange
+and citron trees which adorn it, Whydah is called &ldquo;the garden
+of Dahomey.&rdquo; West of Whydah, on the coast and near the
+frontier of Togoland, is the trading town of Grand Popo. Inland
+in Dahomey proper are Abomey (q.v.), the ancient capital, Allada,
+Kana (formerly the country residence and burial-place of the
+kings of Dahomey) and Dogba. In the hinterland are Carnotville
+(a town of French creation), Nikki and Paraku, Borgu
+towns, and Garu, on the right bank of the Niger near the British
+frontier, the terminus of the railway from the coast.</p>
+
+<p><i>Agriculture and Trade.</i>&mdash;The agriculture, trade and commerce
+of Dahomey proper are essentially different from that of the
+hinterland (<i>Haut Dahomé</i>). The soil of Dahomey proper is
+naturally fertile and is capable of being highly cultivated. It
+consists of a rich clay of a deep red colour. Finely-powdered
+quartz and yellow mica are met with, denoting the deposit of
+disintegrated granite from the interior. The principal product
+is palm-oil, which is made in large quantities throughout the
+country. The district of Toffo is particularly noted for its oil-palm
+orchards. Palm-wine is also made, but the manufacture
+is discouraged as the process destroys the tree. Next to palm-oil
+the principal vegetable products are maize, guinea-corn, cassava,
+yams, sweet potatoes, plantains, coco-nuts, oranges, limes and
+the African apple, which grows almost wild. The country also
+produces ground-nuts, kola-nuts, pine-apples, guavas, spices of
+all kinds, ginger, okros (<i>Hibiscus</i>), sugar-cane, onions, tomatoes
+and papaws. Plantations of rubber trees and vines have been
+made. Cattle, sheep, goats and fowls are scarce. There is a
+large fishing industry in the lagoons. Round the villages, and
+here and there in the forest, clearings are met with, cultivated
+in places, but agriculture is in a backward condition. In the
+grassy uplands of the interior cattle and horses thrive, and
+cotton of a fairly good quality is grown by the inhabitants
+for their own use. The prosperity of the country depends chiefly
+on the export of palm-oil and palm-kernels. Copra, kola-nuts,
+rubber and dried fish are also exported, the fish going to Lagos.
+The adulteration of the palm-kernels by the natives, which
+became a serious menace to trade, was partially checked (1900-1903)
+by measures taken to ensure the inspection of the kernels
+before shipment. Trade is mainly with Germany and Great
+Britain, a large proportion of the cargo passing through the
+British port of Lagos. Only some 25% of the commerce is
+with France. Cotton goods (chiefly from Great Britain),
+machinery and metals, alcohol (from Germany) and tobacco are
+the chief imports. The volume of trade, which had increased
+from £701,000 in 1898 to £1,230,000 in 1902, declined in 1903 to
+£826,000 in consequence of the failure of rain, this causing a
+decrease in the production of palm-oil and kernels. In 1904 the
+total rose to £873,399. In 1905 the figure was £734,667, and in
+1907 £853,051. By the Anglo-French Convention of 1898 the
+imposition of differential duties on goods of British origin was
+forbidden for a period of thirty years from that date.</p>
+
+<p><i>Communications.</i>&mdash;The Dahomey railway from Kotonu to the
+Niger is of metre gauge (3.28 ft.). Work was begun in 1900, and
+in 1902 the main line was completed to Toffo, a distance of 55 m.
+Some difficulty was then encountered in crossing the Lama
+Marsh, but by the end of 1905 the railway had been carried
+through Abomey to Pauignan, 120 m. from Kotonu. In 1907
+the rails had reached Paraku, 150 m. farther north. A branch
+railway from the main line serves the western part of the colony.
+It goes via Whydah to Segborué on Lake Ahémé. Besides the
+railways, tramway lines exist in various parts of Dahomey. One,
+28 m. long, runs from Porto Novo through the market-town of
+Adjara to Sakete, close to the British frontier in the direction
+of Lagos. This line serves a belt of country rich in oil-palms.
+Kotonu is a regular port of call for steamers from Europe to the
+West Coast, and there is also regular steamship communication
+along the lagoons between Porto Novo and Lagos. There is a
+steamboat service between Porto Novo and Kotonu. A telegraph
+line connects Kotonu with Abomey, the Niger and Senegal.</p>
+
+<p><i>Administration.</i>&mdash;The colony is administered by a lieutenant-governor,
+assisted by a council composed of official and unofficial
+members. The colony is divided into territories annexed,
+territories protected, and &ldquo;territories of political action,&rdquo; but
+for administrative purposes the division is into &ldquo;circles&rdquo; or
+provinces. Over each circle is an administrator with extensive
+powers. Except in the annexed territories the native states are
+maintained under French supervision, and native laws and
+customs, as far as possible, retained. Natives, however, may
+place themselves under the jurisdiction of the French law. Such
+natives are known as &ldquo;Assimilés.&rdquo; In general the administrative
+system is the same as that for all the colonies of French
+West Africa (q.v.). The chief source of revenue is the customs,
+while the capitation tax contributes most to the local budget.</p>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;The kingdom of Dahomey, like those of Benin and
+Ashanti, is an instance of a purely negro and pagan state,
+endowed with a highly organized government, and possessing
+a certain amount of indigenous civilization and culture. Its
+history begins about the commencement of the 17th century.
+At that period the country now known as Dahomey was included
+in the extensive kingdom of Allada or Ardrah, of which the
+capital was the present town of Allada, on the road from Whydah
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page736" id="page736"></a>736</span>
+to Abomey. Allada became dismembered on the death of a
+reigning sovereign, and three separate kingdoms were constituted
+under his three sons. One state was formed by one brother
+round the old capital of Allada, and retained the name of Allada
+or Ardrah; another brother migrated to the east and formed
+a state known under the name of Porto Novo; while the third
+brother, Takudonu, travelled northwards, and after some
+vicissitudes established the kingdom of Dahomey. The word
+Dahomey means &ldquo;in Danh&rsquo;s belly,&rdquo; and is explained by the
+following legend which, says Sir Richard Burton, &ldquo;is known
+(1864) to everybody in the kingdom.&rdquo; Takudonu having settled
+in a town called Uhwawe encroached on the land of a neighbouring
+chief named Danh (the snake). Takudonu wearied Danh by
+perpetual demands for land, and the chief one day exclaimed in
+anger &ldquo;soon thou wilt build in my belly.&rdquo; So it came to pass.
+Takudonu slew Danh and over his grave built himself a palace
+which was called Dahomey, a name thenceforth adopted by
+the new king&rsquo;s followers. About 1724-1728 Dahomey, having
+become a powerful state, invaded and conquered successively
+Allada and Whydah. The Whydahs made several attempts to
+recover their freedom, but without success; while on the other
+hand the Dahomeyans failed in all their expeditions against
+Grand Popo, a town founded by refugee Whydahs on a lagoon
+to the west. It is related that the repulses they met with in that
+quarter led to the order that no Dahomeyan warrior was to enter
+a canoe. Porto Novo at the beginning of the 19th century
+became tributary to Dahomey.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the state of affairs at the accession of King Gezo
+about the year 1818. This monarch, who reigned forty years,
+raised the power of Dahomey to its highest pitch, extending
+greatly the border of his kingdom to the north. He boasted of
+having first organized the Amazons, a force of women to whom
+he attributed his successes. The Amazons, however, were state
+soldiery long before Gezo&rsquo;s reign, and what that monarch really
+did was to reorganize and strengthen the force.</p>
+
+<p>In 1851 Gezo attacked Abeokuta in the Yoruba country and
+the centre of the Egba power, but was beaten back. In the
+same year the king signed a commercial treaty with France, in
+which Gezo also undertook to preserve &ldquo;the integrity of the
+territory belonging to the French fort&rdquo; at Whydah. The fort
+referred to was one built in the 17th century, and in 1842 made
+over to a French mercantile house. England, Portugal and
+Brazil also had &ldquo;forts&rdquo; at Whydah&mdash;all in a ruinous condition
+and ungarrisoned. But when in 1852 England, to prevent the
+slave-trade, blockaded the Dahomeyan coast, energetic protests
+were made by Portugal and France, based on the existence of
+these &ldquo;forts.&rdquo; In 1858 Gezo died. He had greatly reduced
+the custom of human sacrifice, and left instructions that after
+his death there was to be no general sacrifice of the palace
+women.</p>
+
+<p>Gezo was succeeded by his son Gléglé (or Gélélé), whose attacks
+on neighbouring states, persecution of native Christians, and
+encouragement of the slave-trade involved him in difficulties
+with Great Britain and with France. It was, said Earl Russell,
+foreign secretary, to check &ldquo;the aggressive spirit of the king of
+Dahomey&rdquo; that England in 1861 annexed the island of Lagos.
+Nevertheless in the following year Gléglé captured Ishagga and
+in 1864 unsuccessfully attacked Abeokuta, both towns in the
+Lagos hinterland. In 1863 Commander Wilmot, R.N., and in
+1864 Sir Richard Burton (the explorer and orientalist) were
+sent on missions to the king, but their efforts to induce the
+Dahomeyans to give up human sacrifices, slave-trading, &amp;c.
+met with no success. In 1863, however, a step was taken by
+France which was the counterpart of the British annexation of
+Lagos. In that year the kingdom of Porto Novo accepted a
+French protectorate, and an Anglo-French agreement of 1864
+fixed its boundaries. This protectorate was soon afterwards
+abandoned by Napoleon III., but was re-established in 1882.
+At this period the rivalry of European powers for possessions in
+Africa was becoming acute, and German agents appeared on
+the Dahomeyan coast. However, by an arrangement concluded
+in 1885, the German protectorate in Guinea was confined to
+Togo, save for the town of Little Popo at the western end of the
+lagoon of Grand Popo. In January 1886 Portugal&mdash;in virtue
+of her ancient rights at Whydah&mdash;announced that she had
+assumed a protectorate over the Dahomeyan coast, but she was
+induced by France to withdraw her protectorate in December
+1887. Finally, the last international difficulty in the way of
+France was removed by the Anglo-French agreement of 1889,
+whereby Kotonu was surrendered by Great Britain. France
+claimed rights at Kotonu in virtue of treaties concluded with
+Gléglé in 1868 and 1878, but the chiefs of the town had placed
+themselves under the protection of the British at Lagos.</p>
+
+<p>With the arrangements between the European powers the
+Dahomeyans had little to do, and in 1889, the year in which the
+Anglo-French agreement was signed, trouble arose between
+Gléglé and the French. The Dahomeyans were the more confident,
+as through German and other merchants at Whydah they
+were well supplied with modern arms and ammunition. Gléglé
+claimed the right to collect the customs at Kotonu, and to depose
+the king of Porto Novo, and proceeded to raid the territory of
+that potentate (his brother). A French mission sent to Abomey
+failed to come to an agreement with the Dahomeyans, who
+attributed the misunderstandings to the fact that there was no
+longer a king in France! Gléglé died on the 28th of December
+1889, two days after the French mission had left his capital.
+He was succeeded by his son Behanzin. A French force was
+landed at Kotonu, and severe fighting followed in which the
+Amazons played a conspicuous part. In October 1890 a treaty
+was signed which secured to France Porto Novo and Kotonu,
+and to the king of Dahomey an annual pension of £800. It was
+unlikely that peace on such terms would prove lasting, and
+Behanzin&rsquo;s slave-raiding expeditions led in 1892 to a new war
+with France. General A. A. Dodds was placed in command of a
+strong force of Europeans and Senegalese, and after a sharp
+campaign during September and October completely defeated
+the Dahomeyan troops. Behanzin set fire to Abomey (entered
+by the French troops on the 17th of November) and fled north.
+Pursued by the enemy, abandoned by his people, he surrendered
+unconditionally on the 25th of January 1894, and was deported
+to Martinique, being transferred in 1906 to Algeria, where he
+died on the 10th of December of the same year.</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended the independent existence of Dahomey. The
+French divided the kingdom in two&mdash;Abomey and Allada&mdash;placing
+on the throne of Abomey a brother of the exiled monarch.
+Chief among the causes which led to the collapse of the
+Dahomeyan kingdom was the system which devoted the flower
+of its womanhood to the profession of arms.</p>
+
+<p>Whydah and the adjacent territory was annexed to France by
+General Dodds on the 3rd of December 1892, and the rest of
+Dahomey placed under a French protectorate at the same time.
+The prince who had been made king of Abomey was found
+intriguing against the French, and in 1900 was exiled by them
+to the Congo, and with him disappeared the last vestige of
+Dahomeyan sovereignty.</p>
+
+<p>Dahomey conquered, the French at once set to work to secure
+as much of the hinterland as possible. On the north they penetrated
+to the Niger, on the east they entered Borgu (a country
+claimed by the Royal Niger Company for Great Britain), on the
+west they overlapped the territory claimed by Germany as the
+hinterland of Togo. The struggle with Great Britain and Germany
+for supremacy in this region forms one of the most interesting
+chapters in the story of the partition of Africa. In the
+result France succeeded in securing a junction between Dahomey
+and her other possessions in West Africa, but failed to secure any
+part of the Niger navigable from the sea (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Africa</a></span>: <i>History</i>,
+and <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Nigeria</a></span>). A Franco-German convention of 1897 settled
+the boundary on the west, and the Anglo-French convention of
+the 14th of June 1898 defined the frontier on the east. In 1899,
+on the disintegration of the French Sudan, the districts of Fada
+N&rsquo;Gurma and Say, lying north of Borgu, were added to Dahomey,
+but in 1907 they were transferred to Upper Senegal-Niger, with
+which colony they are closely connected both geographically and
+ethnographically. From 1894 onward the French devoted great
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page737" id="page737"></a>737</span>
+attention to the development of the material resources of the
+country.</p>
+
+<p><i>The &ldquo;Customs.&rdquo;</i>&mdash;Reference has already been made to the
+Dahomey &ldquo;Customs,&rdquo; which gave the country an infamous
+notoriety. The &ldquo;Customs&rdquo; appear to date from the middle of
+the 17th century, and were of two kinds: the grand Customs
+performed on the death of a king; and the minor Customs,
+held twice a year. The horrors of these saturnalia of bloodshed
+were attributable not to a love of cruelty but to filial piety.
+Upon the death of a king human victims were sacrificed at his
+grave to supply him with wives, attendants, &amp;c. in the spirit
+world. The grand Customs surpassed the annual rites in splendour
+and bloodshed. At those held in 1791 during January,
+February and March, it is stated that no fewer than 500 men,
+women and children were put to death. The minor Customs
+were first heard of in Europe in the early years of the 18th
+century. They formed continuations of the grand Customs,
+and &ldquo;periodically supplied the departed monarch with fresh
+attendants in the shadowy world.&rdquo; The actual slaughter was
+preluded by dancing, feasting, speechmaking and elaborate
+ceremonial. The victims, chiefly prisoners of war, were dressed
+in calico shirts decorated round the neck and down the sleeves
+with red bindings, and with a crimson patch on the left breast,
+and wore long white night-caps with spirals of blue ribbon sewn
+on. Some of them, tied in baskets, were at one stage of the
+proceedings taken to the top of a high platform, together with
+an alligator, a cat and a hawk in similar baskets, and paraded on
+the heads of the Amazons. The king then made a speech explaining
+that the victims were sent to testify to his greatness in
+spirit-land, the men and the animals each to their kind. They
+were then hurled down into the middle of a surging crowd of
+natives, and butchered. At another stage of the festival human
+sacrifices were offered at the shrine of the king&rsquo;s ancestors, and
+the blood was sprinkled on their graves. This was known as
+<i>Zan Nyanyana</i> or &ldquo;evil night,&rdquo; the king going in procession with
+his wives and officials and himself executing the doomed. These
+semi-public massacres formed only a part of the slaughter, for
+many women, eunuchs and others within the palace were done
+to death privately. The skulls were used to adorn the palace
+walls, and the king&rsquo;s sleeping-chamber was paved with the heads
+of his enemies. The skulls of the conquered kings were turned
+into royal drinking cups, their conversion to this use being
+esteemed an honour. Sir Richard Burton insists (<i>A Mission to
+Gelele, King of Dahome</i>) that the horrors of these rites were
+greatly exaggerated. For instance, the story that the king
+floated a canoe in a tank of human blood was, he writes, quite
+untrue. He denies, too, that the victims were tortured, and
+affirms that on the contrary they were treated humanely, and,
+in many cases, even acquiesced in their fate. It seems that
+cannibalism was a sequel of the Customs, the bodies of the
+slaughtered being roasted and devoured smoking hot. On the
+death of the king the wives, after the most extravagant demonstrations
+of grief, broke and destroyed everything within
+their reach, and attacked and murdered each other, the uproar
+continuing until order was restored by the new sovereign.</p>
+
+<p><i>Amazonian Army.</i>&mdash;The training of women as soldiers was
+the most singular Dahomeyan institution. About one-fourth of
+the whole female population were said to be &ldquo;married to the
+fetich,&rdquo; many even before their birth, and the remainder were
+entirely at the disposal of the king. The most favoured were
+selected as his own wives or enlisted into the regiments of
+Amazons, and then the chief men were liberally supplied. Of
+the female captives the most promising were drafted into the
+ranks as soldiers, and the rest became Amazonian camp followers
+and slaves in the royal households. These female levies formed
+the flower of the Dahomeyan army. They were marshalled in
+regiments, each with its distinctive uniform and badges, and they
+took the post of honour in all battles. Their number has been
+variously stated. Sir R. F. Burton, in 1862, who saw the army
+marching out of Kana on an expedition, computed the whole
+force of female troops at 2500, of whom one-third were unarmed
+or only half-armed. Their weapons were blunderbusses, flint
+muskets, and bows and arrows. A later writer estimated the
+number of Amazons at 1000, and the male soldiers at 10,000.
+The system of warfare was one of surprise. The army marched
+out, and, when within a few days&rsquo; journey of the town to be
+attacked, silence was enjoined and no fires permitted. The
+regular highways were avoided, and the advance was by a road
+specially cut through the bush. The town was surrounded at
+night, and just before daybreak a rush was made and every soul
+captured if possible; none were killed except in self-defence, as
+the first object was to capture, not to kill. The season usually
+selected for expeditions was from January to March, or immediately
+after the annual &ldquo;Customs.&rdquo; The Amazons were carefully
+trained, and the king was in the habit of holding &ldquo;autumn
+man&oelig;uvres&rdquo; for the benefit of foreigners. Many Europeans
+have witnessed a mimic assault, and agree in ascribing a marvellous
+power of endurance to the women. Lines of thorny acacia
+were piled up one behind the other to represent defences, and at
+a given signal the Amazons, barefooted and without any special
+protection, charged and disappeared from sight. Presently they
+emerged within the lines torn and bleeding, but apparently
+insensible to pain, and the parade closed with a march past, each
+warrior leading a pretended captive bound with a rope.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;<i>Notre Colonie de Dahomey</i>, by G. François
+(Paris, 1906), and <i>Le Dahomey</i> (1909), an official publication, deal
+with topography, ethnography and economics; L. Brunet and L.
+Giethlen, <i><span class="correction" title="amended from Dohomey">Dahomey</span> et dépendances</i> (Paris, 1900); Édouard Foà, <i>Le
+Dahomey</i> (Paris, 1895). Religion, laws and language are specially
+dealt with in <i>Ewe-Speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast</i>, by A. B.
+Ellis (London, 1890), and in <i>La Côte des Esclaves et le Dahomey</i>, by
+P. Bouche (Paris, 1885). Much historical matter, with particular
+notices of the Amazons and the &ldquo;Customs,&rdquo; is contained in <i>A Mission
+to Gelele</i>, by Sir R. Burton (London, 1864). The story of the French
+conquest is told in <i>Campagne du Dahomey</i>, by Jules Poirier (Paris,
+1895). The standard authority on the early history is <i>The History
+of Dahomey</i>, by Archibald Dalzel (sometime governor of the English
+fort at Whydah) (London, 1793). The annual <i>Reports</i> issued by the
+British, Foreign, and French Colonial Offices may be consulted, and
+the <i>Bibliographie raisonnée des ouvrages concernant le Dahomey</i>,
+by A. Pawlowski (Paris, 1895), is a useful guide to the literature of
+the country to that date. A <i>Carte du Dahomey</i>, by A. Meunier,
+(3 sheets, scale 1:500,000), was published in Paris, 1907.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAILLÉ<a name="ar15" id="ar15"></a></span> (<span class="sc">Dallaeus</span>), <b>JEAN</b> (1594-1670), French Protestant
+divine, was born at Châtellerault and educated at Poitiers and
+Saumur. From 1612 to 1621 he was tutor to two of the grandsons
+of Philippe de Mornay, seigneur du Plessis Marly. Ordained
+to the ministry in 1623, he was for some time private chaplain
+to Du Plessis Mornay, whose memoirs he subsequently wrote.
+In 1625 Daillé was appointed minister of the church of Saumur,
+and in 1626 was chosen by the Paris consistory to be minister
+of the church of Charenton. Of his works, which are principally
+controversial, the best known is the treatise <i>Du vrai emploi des
+Pères</i> (1631), translated into English by Thomas Smith under
+the title <i>A Treatise concerning the right use of the Fathers</i> (1651).
+The work attacks those who made the authority of the Fathers
+conclusive on matters of faith and practice. Daillé contends
+that the text of the Fathers is often corrupt, and that even
+when it is correct their reasoning is often illogical. In his
+<i>Sermons</i> on the Philippians and Colossians, Daillé vindicated
+his claim to rank as a great preacher as well as an able controversialist.
+He was president of the last national synod held
+in France, which met at Loudun in 1659 (H. M. Baird, <i>The
+Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes</i>, 1895, i.
+pp. 412 ff.), when, as in the <i>Apologie des Synodes d&rsquo;Alençon
+et de Charenton</i> (1655), he defended the universalism of Moses
+Amyraut. He wrote also <i>Apologie pour les Églises Réformées</i>
+and <i>La Foy fondée sur les Saintes Écritures</i>. His life was written
+by his son Adrien, who retired to Zürich at the revocation of the
+edict of Nantes.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAIRY<a name="ar16" id="ar16"></a></span> and <b>DAIRY-FARMING</b> (from the Mid. Eng. <i>deieris</i>,
+from <i>dey</i>, a maid-servant, particularly one about a farm; cf.
+Norw. <i>deia</i>, as in <i>bu-deia</i>, a maid in charge of live-stock, and in
+other compounds; thus &ldquo;dairy&rdquo; means that part of the farm
+buildings where the &ldquo;dey&rdquo; works). Milk, either in its natural
+state, or in the form of butter and cheese, is an article of diet so
+useful, wholesome and palatable, that dairy management, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page738" id="page738"></a>738</span>
+includes all that concerns its production and treatment, constitutes
+a most important branch of husbandry. The physical
+conditions of the different countries of the world have determined
+in each case the most suitable animal for dairy purposes. The
+Laplander obtains his supplies of milk from his rein-deer, the
+roving Tatar from his mares, and the Bedouin of the desert
+from his camels. In the temperate regions of the earth many
+pastoral tribes subsist mainly upon the milk of the sheep. In
+some rocky regions the goat is invaluable as a milk-yielder; and
+the buffalo is equally so amid the swamps and jungles of tropical
+climates. The milking of ewes was once a common practice in
+Great Britain; but it has fallen into disuse because of its hurtful
+effects upon the flock. A few milch asses and goats are here
+and there kept for the benefit of infants or invalids; but with
+these exceptions the cow is the only animal now used for dairy
+purposes.</p>
+
+<p>No branch of agriculture underwent greater changes during
+the closing quarter of the 19th century than dairy-farming;
+within the period named, indeed, the dairying industry may be
+said to have been revolutionized. The two great factors in this
+modification were the introduction about the year 1880 of the
+centrifugal cream-separator, whereby the old slow system of
+raising cream in pans was dispensed with, and the invention
+some ten years later of a quick and easy method of ascertaining
+the fat content of samples of milk without having to resort to
+the tedious processes of chemical analysis. About the year 1875
+the agriculturists of the United Kingdom, influenced by various
+economic causes, began to turn their thoughts more intently in
+the direction of dairy-farming, and to the increased production
+of milk and cream, butter and cheese. On the 24th of October
+1876 was held the first London dairy show, under the auspices
+of a committee of agriculturists, and it has been followed by a
+similar show in every subsequent year. The official report of the
+pioneer show stated that &ldquo;there was a much larger attendance
+and a greater amount of enthusiasm in the movement than even
+the most sanguine of its promoters anticipated.&rdquo; On the day
+named Professor J. Prince Sheldon read at the show a paper on
+the dairying industry, and proposed the formation of a society
+to be called the British Dairy Farmers&rsquo; Association. This was
+unanimously agreed to, and thus was founded an organization
+which has since been closely identified with the development of
+the dairying industry of the United Kingdom. In its earlier
+publications the Association was wont to reproduce from <i>Household
+Words</i> the following tribute to the cow:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>&ldquo;If civilized people were ever to lapse into the worship of animals,
+the Cow would certainly be their chief goddess. What a fountain
+of blessings is the Cow! She is the mother of beef, the source of
+butter, the original cause of cheese, to say nothing of shoe-horns,
+hair-combs and upper leather. A gentle, amiable, ever-yielding
+creature, who has no joy in her family affairs which she does not
+share with man. We rob her of her children that we may rob her
+of her milk, and we only care for her when the robbing may be
+perpetrated.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The association has, directly or indirectly, brought about
+many valuable reforms and improvements in dairying. Its
+London shows have provided, year after year, a variety of
+object-lessons in cheese, in butter and in dairy equipment. In
+order to demonstrate to producers what is the ideal to aim at,
+there is nothing more effective than a competitive exhibition of
+products, and the approach to uniform excellence of character
+in cheese and butter of whatever kinds is most obvious to those
+who remember what these products were like at the first two or
+three dairy shows. Simultaneously there has been a no less
+marked advance in the mechanical aids to dairying, including,
+in particular, the centrifugal cream-separator, the crude germ
+of which was first brought before the public at the international
+dairy show held at Hamburg in the spring of 1877. The association
+in good time set the example, now beneficially followed in
+many parts of Great Britain, of providing means for technical
+instruction in the making of cheese and butter, by the establishment
+of a dairy school in the Vale of Aylesbury, subsequently
+removing it to new and excellent premises at Reading, where
+it is known as the British Dairy Institute. The initiation of
+butter-making contests at the annual dairy shows stimulated
+the competitive instinct of dairy workers, and afforded the
+public useful object-lessons; in more recent years milking
+competitions have been added. Milking trials and butter tests
+of cows conducted at the dairy shows have afforded results of
+much practical value. Many of the larger agricultural societies
+have found it expedient to include in their annual shows a working
+dairy, wherein butter-making contests are held and public
+demonstrations are given.</p>
+
+<p>What are regarded as the dairy breeds of cattle is illustrated
+by the prize schedule of the annual London dairy show, in which
+sections are provided for cows and heifers of the Shorthorn,
+Jersey, Guernsey, Red Polled, Ayrshire, Kerry and Dexter
+breeds (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Cattle</a></span>). A miscellaneous class is also provided,
+the entries in which are mostly cross-breds. There are likewise
+classes for Shorthorn bulls, Jersey bulls, and bulls of any other
+pure breed, but it is stipulated that all bulls must be of proved
+descent from dams that have won prizes in the milking trials or
+butter tests of the British Dairy Farmers&rsquo; Association or other
+high-class agricultural society. The importance of securing
+dairy characters in the sire is thus recognized, and it is notified
+that, as the object of the bull classes is to encourage the breeding
+of bulls for dairy purposes, the prizes are to be given solely to
+animals exhibited in good stock-getting condition.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Milk and Butter Tests</p>
+
+<p>The award of prizes in connexion with milking trials cannot
+be determined simply by the quantity of milk yielded in a given
+period, say twenty-four hours. Other matters must obviously
+be taken into consideration, such as the quality of the milk and
+the time that has elapsed since the birth cf the last calf. With
+regard to the former point, for example, it is quite possible for
+one cow to give more milk than another, but for the milk of the
+second cow to include the larger quantity of butter-fat. The
+awards are therefore determined by the total number of points
+obtained according to the following scheme:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>One point for every ten days since calving (deducting the first
+forty days), with a maximum of fourteen points.</p>
+
+<p>One point for every pound of milk, taking the average of two
+days&rsquo; yield.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty points for every pound of butter-fat produced.</p>
+
+<p>Four points for every pound of &ldquo;solids other than fat.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><i>Deductions.</i>&mdash;Ten points each time the fat is below 3%.</p>
+
+<p> &emsp; Ten points each time the solids other than fat fall below 8.5%.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table I.</span>&mdash;<i>Prize Shorthorn and Jersey Cows in the Milking Trials,
+ London Dairy Show, 1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Cow.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Age.</td> <td class="tccm allb">In<br />Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Milk<br />per<br />Day.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Fat.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Other<br />Solids.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />Points.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Years.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Days.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb"><i>Shorthorns eligible for Herd-Book</i>&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Heroine III.</td> <td class="tcc rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">61</td> <td class="tcc rb">52.4</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.7</td> <td class="tcc rb">8.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">91.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Musical</td> <td class="tcc rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">16</td> <td class="tcc rb">45.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">90.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Lady Rosedale</td> <td class="tcc rb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td> <td class="tcc rb">47.8</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.0</td> <td class="tcr rb">88.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb"><i>Shorthorns not eligible for Herd-Book</i>&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Granny</td> <td class="tcc rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">33</td> <td class="tcc rb">70.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">8.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">144.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Cherry</td> <td class="tcc rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">103</td> <td class="tcc rb">55.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">8.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">127.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Chance</td> <td class="tcc rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">23</td> <td class="tcc rb">60.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.6</td> <td class="tcc rb">8.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">124.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb"><i>Jerseys</i>&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Sultane 14th</td> <td class="tcc rb">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">256</td> <td class="tcc rb">41.7</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.9</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">112&emsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Queen Bess</td> <td class="tcc rb">7½</td> <td class="tcr rb">136</td> <td class="tcc rb">39.4</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.8</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.0</td> <td class="tcr rb">101&emsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">&emsp; Gloaming IV.</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">156</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">30.5</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">6.7</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">9.5</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">94.9</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="noind">This method of award is at present the best that can be devised,
+but it is possible that, as experience accumulates, some rearrangement
+of the points may be found to be desirable. Omitting
+many of the details, Table I. shows some of the results in the
+case of Shorthorn and Jersey prize cows. The days &ldquo;in milk&rdquo;
+denote in each case the number of days that have elapsed since
+calving; and if the one day&rsquo;s yield of milk is desired in gallons,
+it can be obtained approximately<a name="fa1a" id="fa1a" href="#ft1a"><span class="sp">1</span></a> by dividing the weight in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page739" id="page739"></a>739</span>
+pounds by 10: thus, the Shorthorn cow Heroine III. gave 52.4 &#8468;,
+or 5.24 gallons, of milk per day. The table is incidentally of
+interest as showing how superior as milch kine are the unregistered
+or non-pedigree Shorthorns&mdash;which are typical of
+the great majority of dairy cows in the United Kingdom&mdash;as
+compared with the pedigree animals entered, or eligible for entry,
+in Coates&rsquo;s Herd-Book. The evening&rsquo;s milk, it should be added,
+is nearly always richer in fat than the morning&rsquo;s, but the percentages
+in the table relate to the entire day&rsquo;s milk.</p>
+
+<p>The milking trials are based upon a chemical test, as it is
+necessary to determine the percentage of fat and of solids other
+than fat in each sample of milk. The butter test, on the other
+hand, is a churn test, as the cream has to be separated from
+the milk and churned. The following is the scale of points
+used at the London dairy show in making awards in butter
+tests:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>One point for every ounce of butter; one point for every completed
+ten days since calving, deducting the first forty days. Maximum
+allowance for period of lactation, 12 points.</p>
+
+<p>Fractions of ounces of butter, and incomplete periods of less than
+ten days, to be worked out in decimals and added to the total
+points.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of cows obtaining the same number of points, the
+prize to be awarded to the cow that has been the longest time in
+milk.</p>
+
+<p>No prize or certificate to be given in the case of:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>(<i>a</i>) Cows under five years old failing to obtain 28 points.</p>
+<p>(<i>b</i>) Cows five years old and over failing to obtain 32 points.</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table II.</span>&mdash;<i>Prize Shorthorn and Jersey Cows in the Butter Tests, London Dairy Show, 1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Cows.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Age.</td> <td class="tccm allb">In<br />Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Milk<br />per<br />Day.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Milk to<br />1 &#8468;<br />Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Points<br />for<br />Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Points<br />for <br />Lactation.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />Points.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Years.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Days.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468; &emsp; oz.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468; &ensp; oz.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Shorthorns&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; 1st</td> <td class="tcc rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">104</td> <td class="tcc rb">55 &emsp; 2</td> <td class="tcl rb">2 &emsp; 5¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">23.67</td> <td class="tcc rb">37.25</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.40</td> <td class="tcc rb">43.65</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; 2nd</td> <td class="tcc rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">34</td> <td class="tcc rb">72 &emsp; 7</td> <td class="tcl rb">2 &emsp; 10¾</td> <td class="tcc rb">27.11</td> <td class="tcc rb">42.75</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">42.75</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; 3rd</td> <td class="tcc rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">33</td> <td class="tcc rb">58 &emsp; 5</td> <td class="tcl rb">2 &emsp; 7¾</td> <td class="tcc rb">23.47</td> <td class="tcc rb">39.75</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">39.75</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Jerseys&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; 1st</td> <td class="tcc rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">157</td> <td class="tcc rb">29 &emsp; 10</td> <td class="tcl rb">2 &emsp; 2¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">13.83</td> <td class="tcc rb">34.25</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.70</td> <td class="tcc rb">45.95</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; 2nd</td> <td class="tcc rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">103</td> <td class="tcc rb">33 &emsp; 10</td> <td class="tcl rb">2 &emsp; 3</td> <td class="tcc rb">15.37</td> <td class="tcc rb">35.00</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.30</td> <td class="tcc rb">41.30</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">&emsp; 3rd</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">12</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">257</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">40 &emsp; 13</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">1 &emsp; 12</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">23.32</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">28.00</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">12.00</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">40.00</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The manner in which butter tests are decided will be rendered
+clear by a study of Table II. It is seen that whilst the much
+larger Shorthorn cows&mdash;having a bigger frame to maintain
+and consuming more food&mdash;gave both more milk and more
+butter in the day of twenty-four hours, the Jersey milk was
+much the richer in fat. In the case of the first-prize Jersey
+the &ldquo;butter ratio,&rdquo; as it is termed, was excellent, as only 13.83 &#8468;
+of milk were required to yield 1 &#8468; of butter; in the case of the
+second-prize Shorthorn, practically twice this quantity (or
+27.11 lb) was needed. Moreover, if the days in milk are taken
+into account, the difference in favour of the Jersey is seen to
+be 123 days.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table III.</span>&mdash;<i>Summary of the English Jersey Cattle Society&rsquo;s
+Butter Tests, Fourteen Years, 1886-1899.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Cows&rsquo; Ages.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Cows<br />Tested.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Average<br />Time in<br />Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Average<br />Milk<br />Yield.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Average<br />Butter<br />Yield.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Quantity<br />Milk to<br />1 &#8468;<br />Butter</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">Years.</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Days</td> <td class="tcl rb">&#8468; &ensp; oz.</td> <td class="tcl rb">&#8468; &ensp; oz.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">1 to &ensp;2</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcc rb">34</td> <td class="tcl rb">15 &emsp; 2</td> <td class="tcl rb">0 &emsp; 13</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.43</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">2 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;3</td> <td class="tcr rb">57</td> <td class="tcc rb">73</td> <td class="tcl rb">24 &emsp; 15¼</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 5¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.74</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">3 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;4</td> <td class="tcr rb">108</td> <td class="tcc rb">77</td> <td class="tcl rb">29 &emsp; 14¾</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 10</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.42</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">4 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;5</td> <td class="tcr rb">165</td> <td class="tcc rb">72</td> <td class="tcl rb">32 &emsp; 5½</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 11¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.01</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">5 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;6 </td> <td class="tcr rb">188</td> <td class="tcc rb">80</td> <td class="tcl rb">32 &emsp; 15¼</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 12</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.76</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">6 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;7</td> <td class="tcr rb">189</td> <td class="tcc rb">89</td> <td class="tcl rb">34 &emsp; 7¾</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 13</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.92</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">7 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;8</td> <td class="tcr rb">139</td> <td class="tcc rb">84</td> <td class="tcl rb">33 &emsp; 11¼</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 13¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.40</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">8 &ensp;&rdquo; &ensp;9</td> <td class="tcr rb">71</td> <td class="tcc rb">82</td> <td class="tcl rb">33 &emsp; 6½</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 12</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.03</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">9 &ensp;&rdquo; 10</td> <td class="tcr rb">42</td> <td class="tcc rb">92</td> <td class="tcl rb">32 &emsp; 6½</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 11¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.95</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">10 &ensp;&rdquo; 11</td> <td class="tcr rb">31</td> <td class="tcc rb">88</td> <td class="tcl rb">35 &emsp; 4</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 14¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.60</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">11 &ensp;&rdquo; 12</td> <td class="tcr rb">15</td> <td class="tcc rb">89</td> <td class="tcl rb">37 &emsp; 1</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 13¾</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.96</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">12 &ensp;&rdquo; 13</td> <td class="tcr rb">13</td> <td class="tcc rb">95</td> <td class="tcl rb">34 &emsp; 1¼</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 10½</td> <td class="tcc rb">20.56</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb bb">13 &ensp;&rdquo; 14</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">54</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">42 &emsp; 1¼</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">2 &emsp; 1¾</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">19.85</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The butter-yielding capacity of the choicest class of butter
+cows, the Jerseys, is amply illustrated in the results of the butter
+tests conducted by the English Jersey Cattle Society over the
+period of fourteen years 1886 to 1899 inclusive. These tests
+were carried out year after year at half a dozen different shows,
+and the results are classified in Table III. according to the age
+of the animals. The average time in milk is measured by the
+number of days since calving, and the milk and butter yields
+are those for the day of twenty-four hours. The last column
+shows the &ldquo;butter ratio.&rdquo; This number is lower in the case
+of the Jerseys than in that of the general run of dairy cows.
+The average results from the total of 1023 cows of the various
+ages are:&mdash;One day&rsquo;s milk, 32 &#8468; 2¼ oz., equal to about 3 gallons
+or 12 quarts; one day&rsquo;s butter, 1 &#8468; 10¾ oz.; butter ratio,
+19.13 or about 16 pints of milk to 1 &#8468; of butter. Individual
+yields are sometimes extraordinarily high. Thus at the Tring
+show in 1899 the three leading Jersey cows gave the following
+results:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Cow.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Age.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Live-<br />Weight.</td> <td class="tccm allb">In Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Butter<br />Ratio.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Years.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Days.</td> <td class="tcl rb">&#8468; &ensp; oz.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sundew 4th</td> <td class="tcc rb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">929</td> <td class="tcr rb">77</td> <td class="tcl rb">3 &emsp; 6¾</td> <td class="tcc rb">15.10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Madeira 5th</td> <td class="tcc rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">1060</td> <td class="tcr rb">107</td> <td class="tcl rb">2 &emsp; 15½</td> <td class="tcc rb">16.14</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Em</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">864</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">44</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">3 &emsp; 4¾</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">13.32</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="noind">The eight prize-winning Jerseys on this occasion, with an
+average weight of 916 &#8468; and an average of 117 days in milk,
+yielded an average of 2 &#8468; 9 oz. of butter per cow in the twenty-four
+hours, the butter ratio working out at 16.69. At the Tring
+show of 1900 a Shorthorn cow Cherry gave as much as 4 &#8468; 4½ oz.
+of butter in twenty-four hours; she had been in milk 41 days,
+and her butter ratio worked out at 15.79,
+which is unusually good for a big cow.</p>
+
+<p>In the six years 1895 to 1900 inclusive
+285 cows of the Shorthorn, Jersey, Guernsey
+and Red Polled breeds were subjected to
+butter tests at the London dairy show, and
+the general results are summarized in
+Table IV.</p>
+
+<p>Although cows in the showyard may
+perhaps be somewhat upset by their
+unusual surroundings, and thus not yield
+so well as at home, yet the average results
+of these butter-test trials over a number of
+years are borne out by the private trials that
+have taken place in various herds. The trials have, moreover,
+brought into prominence the peculiarities of different breeds,
+such as: (<i>a</i>) that the Shorthorns, Red Polls and Kerries, being
+cattle whose milk contains small fat globules, are better for
+milk than the Jerseys and Guernseys, whose milk is richer,
+containing larger-sized fat globules, and is therefore more
+profitable for converting into butter; (<i>b</i>) that the weights of
+the animals, and consequently the proportionate food, must
+be taken into account in estimating the cost of the dairy
+produce; (<i>c</i>) that the influence of the stage reached in the
+period of lactation is much more marked in some breeds than in
+others.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table IV.</span>&mdash;<i>Average Butter Yields and Butter Ratios at the London
+ Dairy Show, Six Years, 1895-1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Breed.</td> <td class="tccm allb">No. of<br />Cows.</td> <td class="tccm allb">In<br />Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Milk to 1 &#8468;<br />Butter.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Days.</td> <td class="tcl rb">&#8468; &ensp; oz.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Shorthorn</td> <td class="tcr rb">106</td> <td class="tcc rb">50</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 11</td> <td class="tcc rb">28.81</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Jersey</td> <td class="tcr rb">126</td> <td class="tcc rb">99</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 10¼</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.15</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Guernsey</td> <td class="tcr rb">23</td> <td class="tcc rb">72</td> <td class="tcl rb">1 &emsp; 9½</td> <td class="tcc rb">21.86</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Red Polled</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">30</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">60</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">1 &emsp; 4¾</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">30.29</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>An instructive example of the milk-yielding capacity of Jersey
+cows is afforded in the carefully kept records of Lord Rothschild&rsquo;s
+herd at Tring Park, Herts. Overleaf are given the figures for
+four years, the gallons being calculated at the rate of 10 lb of
+milk to the gallon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page740" id="page740"></a>740</span></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">In 1897, 30 cows averaged </td> <td class="tcl">6396 &#8468;, or</td> <td class="tcl">640 gallons per cow.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">In 1898, 29 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; </td> <td class="tcl">6209 &emsp; &rdquo; </td> <td class="tcl">621 &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">In 1899, 37 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; </td> <td class="tcl">6430 &emsp; &rdquo; </td> <td class="tcl">643 &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">In 1900, 39 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; </td> <td class="tcl">6136 &emsp; &rdquo; </td> <td class="tcl">614 &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="noind">The average over the four years works out at about 630 gallons
+per cow per annum.</p>
+
+<p>Cows of larger type will give more milk than the Jerseys,
+but it is less rich in fat. The milk record for the year 1900
+of the herd of Red Polled cattle belonging to Mr Garrett Taylor,
+Whitlingham, Norfolk, affords a good example. The cows in
+the herd, which had before 1900 produced one or more calves,
+and in 1900 added another to the list, being in full profit the
+greater part of the year, numbered 82. Their total yield was
+521,950 &#8468; of milk, or an average of 6365 &#8468;&mdash;equivalent to
+about 636 gallons&mdash;per cow. In 1899 the average yield of 96
+cows was 6283 &#8468; or 628 gallons; in 1898 the average yield of
+75 cows was 6473 &#8468; or 647 gallons. Of cows which dropped
+a first calf in the autumn of 1899, one of them&mdash;Lemon&mdash;milked
+continuously for 462 days, yielding a total of 7166 &#8468; of milk,
+being still in milk when the herd year closed on the 27th of
+December. Similar cases were those of Nora, which gave 9066 &#8468;
+of milk in 455 days; Doris, 8138 &#8468; in 462 days; Brisk, 9248 &#8468;
+in 469 days; Della, 8806 &#8468; in 434 days, drying 28 days before
+the year ended; and Lottie, 6327 &#8468; in 394 days, also drying
+28 days before the year ended; these were all cows with their
+first calf. Eight cows in the herd gave milk on every day of
+the 52 weeks, and 30 others had their milk recorded on 300 days
+or more. Three heifers which produced a first calf before the
+11th of April 1900, averaged in the year 4569 &#8468; of milk, or
+about 456 gallons. In 1900 three cows, Eyke Jessie, Kathleen
+and Doss, each gave over 10,000 &#8468;, or 1000 gallons of milk;
+four cows gave from 9000 &#8468; to 10,000 &#8468;, two from 8000 &#8468; to
+9000 &#8468;, 17 from 7000 &#8468; to 8000 &#8468;, 19 from 6000 &#8468; to 7000 &#8468;,
+30 from 5000 &#8468; to 6000 &#8468;, and 16 from 4000 &#8468; to 5000 &#8468;.
+The practice, long followed at Whitlingham, of developing
+the milk-yielding habit by milking a young cow so long as she
+gives even a small quantity of milk daily, is well supported by
+the figures denoting the results.</p>
+
+<p>Though milking trials and butter tests are not usually available
+to the ordinary dairy farmer in the management of his herd,
+it is, on the other hand, a simple matter for him to keep what
+is known as a milk register. By a milk register is meant a record
+of the quantity of milk yielded by a cow. In other words, it
+is a quantitative estimation of the milk the cow gives. It affords
+no information as to the quality of the milk or as to its butter-yielding
+or cheese-yielding capacity. Nevertheless, by its aid
+the milk-producing capacity of a cow can be ascertained exactly,
+and her character in this respect can be expressed by means of
+figures about which there need be no equivocation. A greater
+or less degree of exactness can be secured, according to the
+greater or less frequency with which the register is taken. Even
+a weekly register would give a fair idea as to the milk yields of a
+cow, and would be extremely valuable as compared with no
+register at all.</p>
+
+<p>The practice of taking the milk register, as followed in a well-known
+dairy, may be briefly described. The cows are always
+milked in the stalls, and during summer they are brought in
+twice a day for this purpose. After each cow is milked, the
+pail containing the whole of her milk is hung on a spring balance
+suspended in a convenient position, and from the gross weight
+indicated there is deducted the already known weight of the
+pail.<a name="fa2a" id="fa2a" href="#ft2a"><span class="sp">2</span></a> The difference, which represents the weight of milk, is
+recorded in a book suitably ruled. This book when open presents
+a view of one week&rsquo;s records. In the left-hand column are the
+names of the cows; on the right of this are fourteen columns,
+two of which receive the morning and evening record of each
+cow. In a final column on the right appears the week&rsquo;s total
+yield for each cow; and space is also allowed for any remarks.
+Fractions of a pound are not entered, but 18 &#8468; 12 oz. would
+be recorded as 19 &#8468;, whereas 21 &#8468; 5 oz. would appear as 21 &#8468;,
+so that a fraction of over half a pound is considered as a whole
+pound, and a fraction of under half a pound is ignored. By
+dividing the pounds by 10 the yield in gallons is readily ascertained.</p>
+
+<p>Every dairy farmer has some idea, as to each of his cows,
+whether she is a good, a bad or an indifferent milker, but such
+knowledge is at best only vague. By the simple means indicated
+the character of each cow as a milk-producer is slowly but surely
+recorded in a manner which is at once exact and definite. Such
+a record is particularly valuable to the farmer, in that it shows
+to him the relative milk-yielding capacities of his cows, and thus
+enables him gradually to weed out the naturally poor milkers
+and replace them by better ones. It also guides him in regulating
+the supply of food according to the yield of milk. The register
+will, in fact, indicate unerringly which are the best milk-yielding
+cows in the dairy, and which therefore are, with the milking
+capacity in view, the best to breed from.</p>
+
+<p>The simplicity and inexpensiveness of the milk register must
+not be overlooked. These are features which should commend
+it especially to the notice of small dairy farmers, for with a
+moderate number of cows it is particularly easy to introduce
+the register. But even with a large dairy it will be found that,
+as soon as the system has got fairly established, the additional
+time and trouble involved will sink into insignificance when
+compared with the benefits which accrue.</p>
+
+<p>The importance of ascertaining not only the quantity, but also
+the quality of milk is aptly illustrated in the case of two cows at
+the Tring show, 1900. The one cow gave in 24 hours 4½ gallons
+of milk, which at 7d. per gallon would work out at about 2s. 7d.;
+she made 2 &#8468; 12 oz. of butter, which at 1s. 4d. per &#8468; would
+bring in 3s. 8d.; consequently by selling the milk the owner
+lost about 1s. 1d. per day. The second cow gave 5<span class="spp">1</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">3</span> gallons of
+milk, which would work out at 3s. 1d.; she made 1 &#8468; 12 oz.
+of butter, which would only be worth 2s. 4d., so that by converting
+the milk into butter the owner lost 9d. per day.</p>
+
+<p>The colour of milk is to some extent an indication of its quality&mdash;the
+deeper the colour the better the quality. The colour depends
+upon the size of the fat globules, a deep yellowish colour
+indicating large globules of fat. When the globules are of large
+size the milk will churn more readily, and the butter is better
+both in quality and in colour.</p>
+
+<p>The following fifty dairy rules relating to the milking and
+general management of cows, and to the care of milk and dairy
+utensils, were drawn up on behalf of, and published by, the
+United States department of agriculture at Washington. They
+are given here with a few merely verbal alterations:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+
+<p class="pt1 center sc">The Owner and his Helpers</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>1. Read current dairy literature and keep posted on new ideas.</p>
+<p>2. Observe and enforce the utmost cleanliness about the cattle,
+ their attendants, the cow-house, the dairy and all
+ utensils.</p>
+<p>3. A person suffering from any disease, or who has been exposed
+ to a contagious disease, must remain away from the cows
+ and the milk.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt1 center sc">The Cow-House</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>4. Keep dairy cattle in a shed or building by themselves. It is
+ preferable to have no cellar below and no storage loft
+ above.</p>
+<p>5. Cow-houses should be well ventilated, lighted and drained;
+ should have tight floors and walls, and be plainly constructed.</p>
+<p>6. Never use musty or dirty litter.</p>
+<p>7. Allow no strong-smelling material in the cow-house for any
+ length of time. Store the manure under cover outside the
+ cow-house, and remove it to a distance as often as practicable.</p>
+<p>8. Whitewash the cow-house once or twice a year; use gypsum in
+ the manure gutters daily.</p>
+<p>9. Use no dry, dusty feed just previous to milking; if fodder is
+ dusty, sprinkle it before it is fed.</p>
+<p>10. Clean and thoroughly air the cow-house before milking; in hot
+ weather sprinkle the floor.</p>
+<p>11. Keep the cow-house and dairy room in good condition, and then
+ insist that the dairy, factory or place where the milk goes
+ be kept equally well.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page741" id="page741"></a>741</span></p>
+
+<p class="pt1 center sc">The Cows</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>12. Have the herd examined at least twice a year by a skilled
+ veterinarian.</p>
+<p>13. Promptly remove from the herd any animal suspected of being
+ in bad health, and reject her milk. Never add an animal to
+ the herd until it is ascertained to be free from disease, especially
+ tuberculosis.</p>
+<p>14. Do not move cows faster than a comfortable walk while on the
+ way to the place of milking or feeding.</p>
+<p>15. Never allow the cows to be excited by hard driving, abuse, loud
+ talking or unnecessary disturbance; do not expose them to
+ cold or storms.</p>
+<p>16. Do not change the feed suddenly.</p>
+<p>17. Feed liberally, and use only fresh, palatable feed-stuffs; in no
+ case should decomposed or mouldy material be used.</p>
+<p>18. Provide water in abundance, easy of access, and always pure;
+ fresh, but not too cold.</p>
+<p>19. Salt should always be accessible to the cows.</p>
+<p>20. Do not allow any strong-flavoured food, like garlic, cabbages
+ and turnips, to be eaten, except immediately after milking.</p>
+<p>21. Clean the entire skin of the cow daily. If hair in the region of
+ the udder is not easily kept clean, it should be clipped.</p>
+<p>22. Do not use the milk within twenty days before calving, nor for
+ three to five days afterwards.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt1 center sc">Milking</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>23. The milker should be clean in all respects; he should not use
+ tobacco while milking; he should wash and dry his hands
+ just before milking.</p>
+<p>24. The milker should wear a clean outer garment, used only when
+ milking and kept in a clean place at other times.</p>
+<p>25. Brush the udder and surrounding parts just before milking
+ and wipe them with a clean damp cloth or sponge.</p>
+<p>26. Milk quietly, quickly, cleanly and thoroughly. Cows do not like
+ unnecessary noise or delay. Commence milking at exactly the
+ same hour every morning and evening, and milk the cows in
+ the same order.</p>
+<p>27. Throw away (but not on the floor&mdash;better in the gutter) the
+ first two or three streams from each teat; this milk is very
+ watery and of little value, but it may injure the rest.</p>
+<p>28. If in any milking a part of the milk is bloody or stringy or
+ unnatural in appearance, the whole should be rejected.</p>
+<p>29. Milk with dry hands; never let the hands come in contact with
+ the milk.</p>
+<p>30. Do not allow dogs, cats or loafers to be around at milking time.</p>
+<p>31. If any accident occurs by which a pail, full or partly full, of milk
+ becomes dirty, do not try to remedy this by straining, but
+ reject all this milk and rinse the pail.</p>
+<p>32. Weigh and record the milk given by each cow, and take a sample
+ morning and night, at least once a week, for testing by the
+ fat test.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt1 center sc">Care of Milk</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>33. Remove the milk of every cow at once from the cow-house to a
+ clean dry room, where the air is pure and sweet. Do not
+ allow cans to remain in the cow-house while they are being
+ filled with milk.</p>
+<p>34. Strain the milk through a metal gauze and a flannel cloth or
+ layer of cotton as soon as it is drawn.</p>
+<p>35. Cool the milk as soon as strained&mdash;to 45° F. if the milk is for
+ shipment, or to 60° if for home use or delivery to a factory.</p>
+<p>36. Never close a can containing warm milk.</p>
+<p>37. If the cover is left off the can, a piece of cloth or mosquito
+ netting should be used to keep out insects.</p>
+<p>38. If milk is stored, it should be kept in tanks of fresh cold water
+ (renewed as often as the temperature increases to any material
+ extent), in a clean, dry, cold room. Unless it is desired to
+ remove cream, it should be stirred with a tin stirrer often
+ enough to prevent the forming of a thick cream layer.</p>
+<p>39. Keep the night milk under shelter so that rain cannot get into
+ the cans. In warm weather keep it in a tank of fresh cold
+ water.</p>
+<p>40. Never mix fresh warm milk with that which has been cooled.</p>
+<p>41. Do not allow the milk to freeze.</p>
+<p>42. In no circumstances should anything be added to milk to prevent
+ its souring. Cleanliness and cold are the only preventives
+ needed.</p>
+<p>43. All milk should be in good condition when delivered at a creamery
+ or a cheesery. This may make it necessary to deliver twice
+ a day during the hottest weather.</p>
+<p>44. When cans are hauled far they should be full, and carried in a
+ spring waggon.</p>
+<p>45. In hot weather cover the cans, when moved in a waggon, with
+a clean wet blanket or canvas.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt1 center sc">The Utensils</p>
+
+<div class="list">
+<p>46. Milk utensils for farm use should be made of metal and have all
+ joints smoothly soldered. Never allow them to become rusty
+ or rough inside.</p>
+<p>47. Do not haul waste products back to the farm in the cans used
+ for delivering milk. When this is unavoidable, insist that
+ the skim milk or whey tank be kept clean.</p>
+<p>48. Cans used for the return of skim milk or whey should be emptied,
+ scalded and cleaned as soon as they arrive at the farm.</p>
+<p>49. Clean all dairy utensils by first thoroughly rinsing them in
+ warm water; next clean inside and out with a brush and
+ hot water in which a cleaning material is dissolved; then
+ rinse and, lastly, sterilize by boiling water or steam. Use
+ pure water only.</p>
+<p>50. After cleaning, keep utensils inverted in pure air, and sun if
+ possible, until wanted for use.</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Food and Milk Production</p>
+
+<p>In their comprehensive paper relating to the feeding of animals
+published in 1895, Lawes and Gilbert discussed amongst other
+questions that of milk production, and directed attention to
+the great difference in the demands made on the food&mdash;on the
+one hand for the production of meat (that is, of animal increase),
+and on the other for the production of milk. Not only, however,
+do cows of different breeds yield different quantities of milk,
+and milk of characteristically different composition, but individual
+animals of the same breed have very different milk-yielding
+capacity; and whatever the capacity of a cow may
+be, she has a maximum yield at one period of her lactation,
+which is followed by a gradual decline. Hence, in comparing
+the amounts of constituents stored up in the fattening increase
+of an ox with the amounts of the same constituents removed
+in the milk of a cow, it is necessary to assume a wide range of
+difference in the yield of milk. Accordingly, Table V. shows the
+amounts of nitrogenous substance, of fat, of non-nitrogenous
+substance not fat, of mineral matter, and of total solid matter,
+carried off in the weekly yield of milk of a cow, on the alternative
+assumptions of a production of 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 or 20
+quarts per head per day. For comparison, there are given at the
+foot of the table the amounts of nitrogenous substance, of fat,
+of mineral matter, and of total solid matter, in the weekly
+increase in live-weight of a fattening ox of an average weight
+of 1000 &#8468;&mdash;on the assumption of a weekly increase, first, of
+10 &#8468;, and, secondly, of 15 &#8468;. The estimates of the amounts
+of constituents in the milk are based on the assumption that
+it will contain 12.5% of total solids&mdash;consisting of 3.65 albuminoids,
+3.50 butter-fat, 4.60 sugar and 0.75 of mineral matter.
+The estimates of the constituents in the fattening increase of
+oxen are founded on determinations made at Rothamsted.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table V.</span>&mdash;<i>Comparison of the Constituents of Food carried off in
+ Milk, and in the Fattening Increase of Oxen.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">[1 Gallon = 10.33 &#8468;]</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Nitrogenous<br />Substance.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Fat.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Non-<br />Nitrogenous<br />Substance<br />not Fat<br />(Sugar).</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Mineral<br />Matter.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Total<br />Solid<br />Matter.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb ptb1" colspan="6"><i>In Milk per Week.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">If:&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp;4 quarts per head per day</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.64</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.53</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.33</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.54</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;9.04</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp;6 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.96</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.80</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.99</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.81</td> <td class="tcc rb">13.56</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp;8 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.28</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.06</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.66</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.08</td> <td class="tcc rb">18.08</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">10 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.60</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.33</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.32</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.35</td> <td class="tcc rb">22.60</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">12 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.92</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.59</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.99</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.62</td> <td class="tcc rb">27.12</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">14 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.24</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.65</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.89</td> <td class="tcc rb">31.64</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">16 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.56</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.12</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.32</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.16</td> <td class="tcc rb">36.16</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">18 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.88</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.39</td> <td class="tcr rb">14.98</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.43</td> <td class="tcc rb">40.68</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">20 &emsp;&rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.20</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.65</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.65</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.70</td> <td class="tcc rb">45.20</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb ptb1" colspan="6"><i>In Increase in Live-Weight per Week.&mdash;Oxen.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">If 10 &#8468; increase</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.75</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.35</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.15</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;7.25</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">If 15 &#8468; increase</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1.13</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">9.53</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">0.22</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">10.88</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>With regard to the very wide range of yield of milk per head
+per day which the figures in the following table assume, it may
+be remarked that it is by no means impossible that the same
+animal might yield the largest amount, namely, 20 quarts, or
+5 gallons, per day near the beginning, and only 4 quarts, or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page742" id="page742"></a>742</span>
+1 gallon, or even less, towards the end of her period of lactation.
+At the same time, an entire herd of, for example, Shorthorns
+or Ayrshires, of fairly average quality, well fed, and including
+animals at various periods of lactation, should not yield an
+average of less than 8 quarts, or 2 gallons, and would seldom
+exceed 10 quarts, or 2½ gallons, per head per day the year round.</p>
+
+<p>For the sake of illustration, an average yield of milk of 10
+quarts, equal 2½ gallons, or between 25 and 26 &#8468; per head per
+day, may be assumed, and the amount of constituents in the
+weekly yield at this rate may be compared with that in the
+weekly increase of the fattening ox at the higher rate assumed
+in the table, namely, 15 &#8468; per 1000 &#8468; live-weight, or 1.5%
+per week. It is seen that whilst of the nitrogenous substance
+of the food the amount stored up in the fattening increase of
+an ox would be only 1.13 &#8468;, the amount carried off as such in
+the milk would be 6.6 &#8468;, or nearly six times as much. Of
+mineral matter, again, whilst the fattening increase would only
+require about 0.22 &#8468;, the milk would Carry off 1.35 &#8468;, or again
+about six times as much. Of fat, however, whilst the fattening
+increase would contain 9.53 &#8468;, the milk would contain only
+6.33 &#8468;, or only about two-thirds as much. On the other hand,
+whilst the fattening increase contains no other non-nitrogenous
+substance than fat, the milk would carry off 8.32 &#8468; in the form
+of milk-sugar. This amount of milk-sugar, reckoned as fat,
+would correspond approximately to the difference between the
+fat in the milk and that in the fattening increase.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident, then, that the drain upon the food is very much
+greater for the production of milk than for that of meat. This
+is especially the case in the important item of nitrogenous
+substance; and if, as is frequently assumed, the butter-fat
+of the milk is at any rate largely derived from the nitrogenous
+substance of the food, so far as it is so at least about two parts of
+such substance would be required to produce one of fat. On
+such an assumption, therefore, the drain upon the nitrogenous
+substance of the food would be very much greater than that
+indicated in the table as existing as nitrogenous substance in
+the milk. To this point further reference will be made presently.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table VI.</span>&mdash;<i>Constituents consumed per 1000&#8468; Live-Weight per Day,
+ for Sustenance and for Milk-Production. The Rothamsted Herd
+ of 30 Cows, Spring 1884.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Total<br />Dry<br />Substance.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">Digestible.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Nitrogenous<br />Substance.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Non-<br />Nitrogenous<br />Substance<br />(as Starch).</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />Nitrogenous<br />and Non-<br />Nitrogenous<br />Substance.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">3.1 &#8468; Cotton cake</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.76</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.07</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.50</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.57</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">2.7 &#8468; Bran</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.33</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.33</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.09</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.42</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">2.8 &#8468; Hay-chaff</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.34</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.15</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.18</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.33</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">5.6 &#8468; Oat-straw-chaff</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.64</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.08</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.21</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.29</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">62.8 &#8468; Mangel</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">7.85</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1.01</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">5.73</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">6.74</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Total</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.92</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.64*</td> <td class="tcc rb">11.71*</td> <td class="tcc rb">14.35</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Required for sustenance</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">0.57</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">7.40</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">7.97</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Available for milk</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.07</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.31</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.38</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">In 23.3 &#8468; milk</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.85</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.02</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.87</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Excess in food</td> <td class="tcc allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb">1.22</td> <td class="tcc allb">1.29</td> <td class="tcc allb">2.51</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb ptb1" colspan="5"><i>Per 1000 &#8468; Live-Weight.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Wolff</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">24</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2.5</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">12.5**</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">15.4</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc" colspan="5">* Albuminoid ratio, 1-4.4.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc" colspan="5">** Exclusive of 0.4 fat; albuminoid ratio, 1-5.4.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Attention may next be directed to the amounts of food, and
+of certain of its constituents, consumed for the production of
+a given amount of milk. This point is illustrated in Table VI.,
+which shows the constituents consumed per 1000 &#8468; live-weight
+per day in the case of the Rothamsted herd of 30 cows in the
+spring of 1884. On the left hand are shown the actual amounts
+of the different foods consumed per 1000 &#8468; live-weight per day;
+and in the respective columns are recorded&mdash;first the amounts of
+total dry substance which the foods contained, and then the
+amounts of digestible nitrogenous, digestible non-nitrogenous
+(reckoned as starch), and digestible total organic substance
+which the different foods would supply; these being calculated
+according to Lawes and Gilbert&rsquo;s own estimates of the percentage
+composition of the foods, and to Wolff&rsquo;s estimates of the proportion
+of the several constituents which would be digestible.</p>
+
+<p>The first column shows that the amount of total dry substance
+of food actually consumed by the herd, per 1000 &#8468; live-weight
+per day, was scarcely 20 &#8468; whilst Wolff&rsquo;s<a name="fa3a" id="fa3a" href="#ft3a"><span class="sp">3</span></a> estimated requirement,
+as stated at the foot of the table, is 24 &#8468;. But his ration
+would doubtless consist to a greater extent of hay and straw-chaff,
+containing a larger proportion of indigestible and effete
+woody fibre. The figures show, indeed that the Rothamsted
+ration supplied, though nearly the same, even a somewhat less
+amount of total digestible constituents than Wolff&rsquo;s.</p>
+
+<p>Of digestible nitrogen substance the food supplied 2.64 &#8468;
+per day, whilst the amount estimated to be required for sustenance
+merely is 0.57 &#8468;; leaving, therefore, 2.07 &#8468; available
+for milk production. The 23.3 &#8468; of milk yielded per 1000 &#8468;
+live-weight per day would, however, contain only 0.85 &#8468;; and
+there would thus remain an apparent excess of 1.22 &#8468; of digestible
+nitrogenous substance in the food supplied. But against the
+amount of 2.64 &#8468; actually consumed, Wolff&rsquo;s estimate of the
+amount required for sustenance and for milk-production is
+2.5 &#8468;, or but little less than the amount actually consumed at
+Rothamsted. On the assumption that the expenditure of
+nitrogenous substance in the production of milk is only in the
+formation of the nitrogenous substances of the milk, there would
+appear to have been a considerable excess given in the food.
+But Wolff&rsquo;s estimate assumes no excess of supply, and that the
+whole is utilized; the fact being that he supposes the butter-fat
+of the milk to have been derived largely, if not wholly, from the
+albuminoids of the food.</p>
+
+<p>It has been shown that although it is possible that some of
+the fat of a fattening animal may be produced from the albuminoids
+of the food, certainly the greater part of it, if not the
+whole, is derived from the carbohydrates. But the physiological
+conditions of the production of milk are so different from those
+for the production of fattening increase, that it is not admissible
+to judge of the sources of the fat of the one from what may
+be established in regard to the other. It has been assumed,
+however, by those who maintain that the fat of the fattening
+animal is formed from albuminoids, that the fat of milk must
+be formed in the same way. Disallowing the legitimacy of such
+a deduction, there do, nevertheless, seem to be reasons for supposing
+that the fat of milk may, at any rate in large proportion,
+be derived from albuminoids.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, as compared with fattening increase, which may in
+a sense be said to be little more than an accumulation of reserve
+material from excess of food, milk is a special product, of a
+special gland, for a special normal exigency of the animal.
+Further, whilst common experience shows that the herbivorous
+animal becomes the more fat the more, within certain limits, its
+food is rich in carbohydrates, it points to the conclusion that both
+the yield of milk and its richness in butter are more connected
+with a liberal supply of the nitrogenous constituents in the food.
+Obviously, so far as this is the case, it may be only that thereby
+more active change in the system, and therefore greater activity
+of the special function, is maintained. The evidence at command
+is, at any rate, not inconsistent with the supposition that a good
+deal of the fat of milk may have its source in the breaking up
+of albuminoids, but direct evidence on the point is still wanting;
+and supposing such breaking up to take place in the gland, the
+question arises&mdash;What becomes of the by-products? Assuming,
+however, that such change does take place, the amount of nitrogenous
+substance supplied to the Rothamsted cows would be less
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page743" id="page743"></a>743</span>
+in excess of the direct requirement for milk-production than the
+figures in the table would indicate, if, indeed, in excess at all.</p>
+
+<p>The figures in the column of Table VI. relating to the estimated
+amount of digestible non-nitrogenous substance reckoned as
+starch show that the quantity actually consumed was 11.71 &#8468;,
+whilst the amount estimated by Wolff to be required was 12.5 &#8468;,
+besides 0.4 &#8468; of fat. The figures further show that, deducting
+7.4 &#8468; for sustenance from the quantity actually consumed, there
+would remain 4.31 &#8468; available for milk-production, whilst only
+about 3.02 &#8468; would be required supposing that both the fat
+of the milk and the sugar had been derived from the carbohydrates
+of the food; and, according to this calculation, there
+would still be an excess in the daily food of 1.29 &#8468;. It is to be
+borne in mind, however, that estimates of the requirement for
+mere sustenance are mainly founded on the results of experiments
+in which the animals are allowed only such a limited amount
+of food as will maintain them without either loss or gain when at
+rest. But physiological considerations point to the conclusion
+that the expenditure, independently of loss or gain, will be the
+greater the more liberal the ration, and hence it is probable
+that the real excess, if any, over that required for sustenance
+and milk-production would be less than that indicated in the
+table, which is calculated on the assumption of a fixed requirement
+for sustenance for a given live-weight of the animal.
+Supposing that there really was any material excess of either
+the nitrogenous or the non-nitrogenous constituents supplied
+over the requirement for sustenance and milk-production,
+the question arises&mdash;Whether, or to what extent, it conduced
+to increase in live-weight of the animals, or whether it was in
+part, or wholly, voided, and so wasted.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center">Table VII.&mdash;Percentage Composition of Milk each Month of the Year; also Average Yield of
+Milk, and of Constituents, per Head per Day each Month, according to Rothamsted Dairy
+Records.</p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2" colspan="4">Average Composition of Milk each<br />Month, 1884.<br />(Dr Vieth&mdash;14,235 analyses.)</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="4">Rothamsted Diary.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Average<br />Yield<br />of Milk<br />per Head<br />per Day,<br />6 Years.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">Estimated Quantity<br />of Constituents in<br />Milk per Head per<br />Day each Month.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Specific<br />Gravity.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Butter-<br />Fat.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Solids<br />not<br />Fat.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />Solids.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Butter-<br />Fat.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Solids<br />not<br />Fat.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />Solids.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">January</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0325</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.55</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.34</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.89</td> <td class="tcc rb">20.31*</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.72</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.90</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.62</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">February</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0325</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.53</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.24</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.77</td> <td class="tcc rb">22.81</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.11</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.91</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">March</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0323</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.50</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.22</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.72</td> <td class="tcc rb">24.19</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.85</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.23</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.08</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">April</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0323</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.43</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.22</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.65</td> <td class="tcc rb">26.50</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.91</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.44</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.35</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">May</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0324</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.34</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.30</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.64</td> <td class="tcc rb">31.31</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.05</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.91</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.96</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">June</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0323</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.31</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.19</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.50</td> <td class="tcc rb">30.81</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.02</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.83</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.85</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">July</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0319</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.47</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.13</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.60</td> <td class="tcc rb">28.00</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.97</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.56</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.53</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">August</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0318</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.87</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.08</td> <td class="tcc rb">12.95</td> <td class="tcc rb">25.00</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.97</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.27</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.24</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">September</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0321</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.11</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.17</td> <td class="tcc rb">13.28</td> <td class="tcc rb">22.94</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.94</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.11</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.05</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">October</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0324</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.26</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.27</td> <td class="tcc rb">13.53</td> <td class="tcc rb">21.00</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.89</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.95</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.84</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">November</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0324</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.36</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.29</td> <td class="tcc rb">13.65</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.19</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.84</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.78</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.62</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">December</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.0326</td> <td class="tcc rb">4.10</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.29</td> <td class="tcc rb">13.39</td> <td class="tcc rb">19.31</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.79</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.79</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.58</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Mean</td> <td class="tcc allb">1.0323</td> <td class="tcc allb">3.74</td> <td class="tcc allb">9.22</td> <td class="tcc allb">12.96</td> <td class="tcc allb">24.28</td> <td class="tcc allb">0.90</td> <td class="tcc allb">2.24</td> <td class="tcc allb">3.14</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc" colspan="9">* Average over five years only, as the records did not commence until February 1884.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>As regards the influence of the period of the year, with its
+characteristic changes of food, on the quantity and composition
+of the milk, the first column of the second division of Table VII.
+shows the average yield of milk per head per day of the Rothamsted
+herd, averaging about 42 cows, almost exclusively Shorthorns,
+in each month of the year, over six years, 1884 to 1889
+inclusive; and the succeeding columns show that amounts of
+butter-fat, of solids not fat, and of total solids in the average
+yield per head per day in each month of the year, calculated,
+not according to direct analytical determinations made at
+Rothamsted, but according to the results of more than 14,000
+analyses made, under the superintendence of Dr Vieth, in the
+laboratory of the Aylesbury Dairy Company in 1884;<a name="fa4a" id="fa4a" href="#ft4a"><span class="sp">4</span></a> the
+samples analysed representing the milk from a great many
+different farms in each month.</p>
+
+<p>It should be stated that the Rothamsted cows had cake
+throughout the year; at first 4 &#8468; per head per day, but afterwards
+graduated according to the yield of milk, on the basis
+of 4 &#8468; for a yield of 28 &#8468; of milk, the result being that then
+the amount given averaged more per head per day during the
+grazing period, but less earlier and later in the year. Bran,
+hay and straw-chaff, and roots (generally mangel), were also
+given when the animals were not turned out to grass. The
+general plan was, therefore, to give cake alone in addition when
+the cows were turned out to grass, but some other dry food,
+and roots, when entirely in the shed during the winter and early
+spring months.</p>
+
+<p>Referring to the column showing the average yield of milk
+per head per day each month over the six years, it will be seen
+that during the six months January, February, September,
+October, November and December the average yield was
+sometimes below 20 &#8468; and on the average only about 21 &#8468;
+of milk per head per day; whilst over the other six months
+it averaged 27.63 &#8468;, and over May and June more than 31 &#8468;
+per head per day. That is to say, the quantity of milk yielded
+was considerably greater during the grazing period than when
+the animals had more dry food, and roots instead of grass.</p>
+
+<p>Next, referring to the particulars of composition, according
+to Dr Vieth&rsquo;s results, which may well be considered as typical
+for the different periods of the year, it is seen that the specific
+gravity of the milk was only average, or lower than average,
+during the grazing period, but rather higher in the earlier and
+later months of the year. The percentage of total solids was
+rather lower than the average at the beginning of the year,
+lowest during the chief grazing months, but considerably higher
+in the later months of the year, when the animals were kept in
+the shed and received more dry food. The percentage of butter-fat
+follows very closely that of the total solids, being the lowest
+during the best grazing months, but considerably higher than
+the average during the last four or five months of the year, when
+more dry food was given. The percentage of solids not fat was
+considerably the lowest during the later
+months of the grazing period, but average,
+or higher than average, during the earlier
+and later months of the year. It may be
+observed that, according to the average
+percentages given in the table, a gallon
+of milk will contain more of both
+total solids and of butter-fat in the later
+months of the year; that is, when there
+is less grass and more dry food given.</p>
+
+<p>Turning to the last three columns of the
+table, it is seen that although, as has
+been shown, the percentage of the several
+constituents in the milk is lower during
+the grazing months, the actual amounts
+contained in the quantity of milk yielded
+per head are distinctly greater during
+those months. Thus, the amount of butter-fat
+yielded <i>per head per day</i> is above the
+average of the year from April to September
+inclusive; the amounts of solids
+not fat are over average from April to
+August inclusive; and the amounts of
+total solids yielded are average, or over
+average, from April to August inclusive.</p>
+
+<p>From the foregoing results it is evident
+that the quantity of milk yielded per head is very much the
+greater during the grazing months of the year, but that the
+percentage composition of the milk is lower during that period
+of higher yield, and considerably higher during the months of
+more exclusively dry-food feeding. Nevertheless, owing to the
+much greater quantity of milk yielded during the grazing
+months, the actual quantity of constituents yielded per Cow is
+greater during those months than during the months of higher
+percentage composition but lower yield of milk per head. It
+may be added that a careful consideration of the number of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page744" id="page744"></a>744</span>
+newly-calved cows brought into the herd each month shows
+that the results as above stated were perfectly distinct,
+independently of any influence of the period of lactation of the
+different individuals of the herd.</p>
+
+<p>The few results which have been brought forward in relation
+to <i>milk-production</i> are admittedly quite insufficient adequately
+to illustrate the influence of variation in the quantity and composition
+of the food on the quantity and composition of the
+milk yielded. Indeed, owing to the intrinsic difficulties of
+experimenting on such a subject, involving so many elements of
+variation, any results obtained have to be interpreted with much
+care and reservation. Nevertheless, it may be taken as clearly
+indicated that, within certain limits, high feeding, and especially
+high nitrogenous feeding, does increase both the yield and the
+richness of the milk.<a name="fa5a" id="fa5a" href="#ft5a"><span class="sp">5</span></a> But it is evident that when high feeding
+is pushed beyond a comparatively limited range, the tendency
+is to increase the weight of the animal&mdash;that is, to favour the
+development of the individual, rather than to enhance the
+activity of the functions connected with the reproductive system.
+This is, of course, a disadvantage when the object is to maintain
+the milk-yielding condition of the animal; but when a cow is
+to be fattened off it will be otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>It has been stated that, early in the period of six years in which
+the Rothamsted results that have been quoted were obtained,
+the amount of oil-cake given was graduated according to the
+yield of milk of each individual cow; as it seemed unreasonable
+that an animal yielding, say, only 4 quarts per day, should
+receive, beside the home foods, as much cake as one yielding
+several times the quantity. The obvious inference is, that any
+excess of food beyond that required for sustenance and milk-production
+would tend to increase the weight of the animal,
+which, according to the circumstances, may or may not be
+desirable.</p>
+
+<p>It may be observed that direct experiments at Rothamsted
+confirm the view, arrived at by common experience, that roots,
+and especially mangel, have a favourable effect on the flow of
+milk. Further, the Rothamsted experiments have shown that
+a higher percentage of butter-fat, of other solids, and of total
+solids, was obtained with mangel than with silage as the succulent
+food. The yield of milk was, however, in a much greater
+degree increased by grazing than by any other change in the
+food; and at Rothamsted the influence of roots comes next
+in order to that of grass, though far behind it, in this respect.
+But with grazing, as has been shown, the percentage composition
+of the milk is considerably reduced; though, owing to the greatly
+increased quantity yielded, the amount of soil-constituents
+removed in the milk when cows are grazing may nevertheless
+be greater per head per day than under any other conditions.
+Lastly, it has been clearly illustrated how very much greater
+is the demand upon the food, especially for nitrogenous and for
+mineral constituents, in the production of milk than in that of
+fattening increase.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Manurial Value of Food consumed in the
+Production of Milk</p>
+
+<p>In any attempt to estimate the average value of the manure
+derived from the consumption of food for the production of
+milk, the difficulty arising from the very wide variation in the
+amount of milk yielded by different cows, or by the same cow
+at different periods of her lactation, is increased by the inadequate
+character of information concerning the difference in the amount
+of the food actually consumed by the animal coincidently
+with the production of such different amounts of milk. But
+although information is lacking for correlating, with numerical
+accuracy, the great difference in milk-yield of individual cows
+with the coincident differences in consumption to produce it,
+it may be considered as satisfactorily established that more food
+is consumed by a herd of cows to produce a fair yield of milk,
+of say 10 or 12 quarts per head per day, than by an equal live-weight
+of oxen fed to produce fattening increase. In the cases
+supposed it may, for practical purposes, be assumed that the
+cows would consume about one-fourth more food than the
+oxen. Accordingly, in the Rothamsted estimates of the value
+of the manure obtained on the consumption of food for the
+production of milk, it is assumed that one-fourth more will be consumed
+by 1000 &#8468; live-weight of cows than by the same weight
+of oxen; but the estimates of the amounts of the constituents of
+the food removed in the milk, or remaining for manure, are nevertheless
+reckoned per ton of each kind of food consumed, as in the
+case of those relating to feeding for the production of fattening
+increase. It may be added that the calculations of the amounts of
+the constituents in the milk are based on the same average composition
+of milk as is adopted in the construction of Table V. Thus
+the nitrogen is taken at 0.579 (= 3.65 nitrogenous substance)%,
+the phosphoric acid at 0.2175%, and the potash at 0.1875%
+in the milk.</p>
+
+<p>Table VIII. shows in detail the estimate of the amount of
+nitrogen in one ton of each food, and in the milk produced from
+its consumption, on the assumption of an average yield of 10
+quarts per head per day; also the amount remaining for manure,
+the amount of ammonia corresponding to the nitrogen, and the
+value of the ammonia at 4d. per &#8468;. Similar particulars are also
+given in relation to the phosphoric acid and the potash consumed
+in the food, removed in the milk, and remaining for manure, &amp;c.
+This table will serve as a sufficient illustration of the mode of
+estimating the <i>total or original</i> value of the manure, derived
+from the consumption of the different foods for the production
+of milk in the case supposed; that is, assuming an average
+yield of a herd of 10 quarts per head per day.</p>
+
+<p>In Table IX. are given the results of similar detailed calculations
+of the <i>total or original</i> manure-value (as in Table VIII.
+for 10 quarts), on the alternative assumptions of a yield of 6, 8,
+12 or 14 quarts per head per day. For comparison there is
+also given, in the first column, the estimate of the <i>total or original</i>
+manure-value when the foods are consumed for the production
+of fattening increase.</p>
+
+<p>So much for the plan and results of the estimations of <i>total
+or original</i> manure-value of the different foods, that is, deducting
+only the constituents removed in the milk, and reckoning the
+remainder at the prices at which they can be purchased in
+artificial manures. With a view to direct application to practice,
+however, it is necessary to estimate the <i>unexhausted manure-value</i>
+of the different foods, or what may be called their <i>compensation-value</i>,
+after they have been used for a series of years by the
+outgoing tenant and he has realized a certain portion of the
+manure-value in his increased crops. In the calculations for this
+purpose the rule is to deduct one-half of the <i>original manure-value</i>
+of the food used the last year, and one-third of the remainder
+each year to the eighth, in the case of all the more concentrated
+foods and of the roots&mdash;in fact, of all the foods in the list excepting
+the hays and the straws. For these, which contain
+larger amounts of indigestible matter, and the constituents of
+which will be more slowly available to crops, two-thirds of the
+<i>original manure-value</i> is deducted for the last year, and only
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page745" id="page745"></a>745</span>
+one-fifth from year to year to the eighth year back. The results
+of the estimates of <i>compensation-value</i> so made are given for the
+five yields of 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 quarts of milk per head per day
+respectively in Lawes and Gilbert&rsquo;s paper<a name="fa6a" id="fa6a" href="#ft6a"><span class="sp">6</span></a> on the valuation
+of the manures obtained by the consumption of foods for the
+production of milk, which may be consulted for fuller details.
+It must, however, be borne in mind that when cows are fed in
+sheds or yards the manure is generally liable to greater losses
+than is the case with fattening oxen. The manure of the cow
+contains much more water in proportion to solid matter than
+that of the ox. Water will, besides, frequently be used for
+washing, and it may be that a good deal of the manure is washed
+into drains and lost. In the event, therefore, of a claim for
+compensation, the management and disposal of the manure
+requires the attention of the valuer. Indeed, the varying
+circumstances that will arise in practice must be carefully
+considered. Bearing these in mind, the estimates may be
+accepted as at any rate the best approximation to the truth
+that existing knowledge provides; and they should be found
+sufficient for the requirements of practical use. Obviously they
+will be more directly applicable in the case of cows feeding entirely
+on the foods enumerated in the list, and not depending
+largely on grass; but, even when the animals are partially
+grass-fed, the value of the manure derived from the additional
+dry food or roots may be estimated according to the scale given.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table VIII.</span>&mdash;<i>Estimates of the Total or Original Manure-Value of Cattle Foods after Consumption by Cows for the Production of Milk.
+Valuation on the assumption of an average production by a herd of 10 quarts of milk per head per day.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3">Nos.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3">Description<br />of Food.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="7">Nitrogen.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="5">Phosphoric Acid.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="5">Potash.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3" colspan="3">Total or<br />Original<br />Manure-<br />Value<br />per Ton<br />of Food<br />consumed.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">In<br />1 Ton<br />of<br />Food.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">In<br />Milk<br />from<br />1 Ton<br />of<br />Food.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="5">In Manure.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">In<br />1 Ton<br />of<br />Food.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">In<br />Milk<br />from<br />1 Ton<br />of<br />Food.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">In Manure.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">In<br />1 Ton<br />of<br />Food.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">In<br />Milk<br />from<br />1 Ton<br />of<br />Food.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">In Manure.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Total<br />remaining<br />for<br />Manure.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Nitrogen<br />equal<br />Ammonia.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">Value of<br />Ammonia<br />at 4 d.<br />per &#8468;.</td>
+
+ <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />remaining<br />for<br />Manure.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="2">Value<br />at 2 d.<br />per &#8468;.</td>
+
+ <td class="tccm allb">Total<br />remaining<br />for<br />Manure.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="2">Value<br />at 1½ d.<br />per &#8468;.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">1</td> <td class="tcl rb">Linseed</td> <td class="tcr rb">80.64</td> <td class="tcr rb">25.04</td> <td class="tcr rb">55.60</td> <td class="tcr rb">67.52</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">34.50</td> <td class="tcc rb">9.34</td> <td class="tcr rb">25.16</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">30.69</td> <td class="tcc rb">8.02</td> <td class="tcr rb">22.67</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">2</td> <td class="tcl rb">Linseed cake</td> <td class="tcr rb">106.40</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">85.54</td> <td class="tcr rb">103.87</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">7.79</td> <td class="tcr rb">37.01</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">31.36</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.71</td> <td class="tcr rb">24.65</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">3</td> <td class="tcl rb">Decorticated<br />cotton cake</td> <td class="tcr rb">147.84</td> <td class="tcr rb">19.27</td> <td class="tcr rb">128.57</td> <td class="tcr rb">156.13</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">69.44</td> <td class="tcc rb">7.18</td> <td class="tcr rb">62.26</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.22</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.58</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">4</td> <td class="tcl rb">Palm-nut cake</td> <td class="tcr rb">56.00</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.14</td> <td class="tcr rb">46.31</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">26.88</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.20</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.20</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.73</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.47</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">5</td> <td class="tcl rb">Undecorticated<br />cotton cake</td> <td class="tcr rb">84.00</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.66</td> <td class="tcr rb">68.34</td> <td class="tcr rb">82.99</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.85</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.95</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.07</td> <td class="tcr rb">39.73</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">6</td> <td class="tcl rb">Cocoanut cake</td> <td class="tcr rb">76.16</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.66</td> <td class="tcr rb">60.50</td> <td class="tcr rb">73.47</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">31.36</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.85</td> <td class="tcr rb">25.51</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.07</td> <td class="tcr rb">39.73</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">7</td> <td class="tcl rb">Rape cake</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">109.76</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">12.50</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">97.26</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">118.11</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr bb">19</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">56.00</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">4.69</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">51.31</td> <td class="tcr bb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">33.60</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">4.09</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">29.51</td> <td class="tcr bb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">8</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr bb">11</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">8</td> <td class="tcl rb">Peas</td> <td class="tcr rb">80.64</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">62.78</td> <td class="tcr rb">76.24</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">19.04</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.36</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">21.50</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.73</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.77</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">9</td> <td class="tcl rb">Beans</td> <td class="tcr rb">89.60</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">71.74</td> <td class="tcr rb">87.12</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">24.64|</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.96</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">29.12</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.73</td> <td class="tcr rb">23.39</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">10</td> <td class="tcl rb">Lentils</td> <td class="tcr rb">94.08</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">76.22</td> <td class="tcr rb">92.56</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.12</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.68</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.73</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.95</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">11</td> <td class="tcl rb">Tares (seed)</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">94.08</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">17.86</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">76.22</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">92.56</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr bb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">17.92</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">6.68</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">11.24</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">17.92</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">5.73</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">12.19</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">6</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr bb">14</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">12</td> <td class="tcl rb">Maize</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.08</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.38</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.70</td> <td class="tcr rb">25.14</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.44</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.50</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.94</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.29</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.56</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.73</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">13</td> <td class="tcl rb">Wheat</td> <td class="tcr rb">40.32</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.38</td> <td class="tcr rb">22.94</td> <td class="tcr rb">27.86</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">19.04</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.50</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.54</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.87</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.56</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.31</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">14</td> <td class="tcl rb">Malt</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.08</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.86</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.22</td> <td class="tcr rb">24.55</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.92</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.24</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.20</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.73</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.47</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">15</td> <td class="tcl rb">Barley</td> <td class="tcr rb">36.96</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.38</td> <td class="tcr rb">19.58</td> <td class="tcr rb">23.78</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.50</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.30</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.32</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.56</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.76</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">16</td> <td class="tcl rb">Oats</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">28.12</td> <td class="tcr rb">34.15</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.44</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.24</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.20</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.20</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.40</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.80</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">17</td> <td class="tcl rb">Rice meal</td> <td class="tcr rb">42.56</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">25.88</td> <td class="tcr rb">31.43</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">(13.44)</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.24</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.20</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">(8.29)</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.40</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.89</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">18</td> <td class="tcl rb">Locust beans</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">26.88</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">13.90</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">12.98</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">15.76</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">5.19</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb" colspan="2">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">4.42</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb" colspan="2">..</td> <td class="tcc rb bb" colspan="3">..</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">19</td> <td class="tcl rb">Malt coombs</td> <td class="tcr rb">87.36</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.66</td> <td class="tcr rb">71.70</td> <td class="tcr rb">87.07</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.85</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.95</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.80</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.07</td> <td class="tcr rb">39.73</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">20</td> <td class="tcl rb">Fine pollard</td> <td class="tcr rb">54.88</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.68</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.20</td> <td class="tcr rb">46.39</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">64.96</td> <td class="tcc rb">6.24</td> <td class="tcr rb">58.72</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">32.70</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.40</td> <td class="tcr rb">27.30</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">21</td> <td class="tcl rb">Coarse pollard</td> <td class="tcr rb">56.00</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.66</td> <td class="tcr rb">40.34</td> <td class="tcr rb">48.99</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">78.40</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.85</td> <td class="tcr rb">72.55</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">33.60</td> <td class="tcc rb">5.07</td> <td class="tcr rb">28.53</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">22</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bran</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">56.00</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">13.90</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">42.10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">51.12</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">17</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">80.64</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">5.19</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">75.45</td> <td class="tcr bb">12</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">32.48</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">4.42</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">28.06</td> <td class="tcr bb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">6</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr bb">13</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">23</td> <td class="tcl rb">Clover hay</td> <td class="tcr rb">53.76</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.94</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.82</td> <td class="tcr rb">54.43</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.77</td> <td class="tcc rb">3.35</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.42</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">33.60</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.94</td> <td class="tcr rb">30.66</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">24</td> <td class="tcl rb">Meadow hay</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">33.60</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">8.36</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">25.24</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">30.65</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">8.96</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">3.10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">5.86</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">35.84</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2.62</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">33.22</td> <td class="tcr bb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">15</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">5</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">25</td> <td class="tcl rb">Pea straw</td> <td class="tcr rb">22.40</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.83</td> <td class="tcr rb">14.57</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.69</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.84</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.91</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.93</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">22.40</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.46</td> <td class="tcr rb">19.94</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">26</td> <td class="tcl rb">Oat straw</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.20</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.95</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.25</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.16</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.38</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.60</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.78</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">22.40</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.29</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.11</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">27</td> <td class="tcl rb">Wheat straw</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.08</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.98</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.10</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.98</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.38</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.23</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.15</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">17.92</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.96</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.96</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">28</td> <td class="tcl rb">Barley straw</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.96</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.46</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.50</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.25</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.03</td> <td class="tcc rb">2.04</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.99</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">22.40</td> <td class="tcc rb">1.80</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.60</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">29</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bean straw</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">20.16</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">5.68</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">14.48</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">17.58</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">6.72</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2.14</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">4.58</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">22.40</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1.80</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">20.60</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">30</td> <td class="tcl rb">Potatoes</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.60</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.07</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.53</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.29</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.36</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.78</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.58</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.32</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.66</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.66</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">31</td> <td class="tcl rb">Carrots</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.48</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.46</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.02</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.67</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.02</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.54</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.48</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.27</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.49</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.78</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">32</td> <td class="tcl rb">Parsnips</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.93</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.67</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.26</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.96</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.26</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.63</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.63</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.06</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.49</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.57</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">33</td> <td class="tcl rb">Mangel wurzels</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.93</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.32</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.61</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.38</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.57</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.49</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.08</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.96</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.49</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.47</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">34</td> <td class="tcl rb">Swedish turnips</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.60</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.14</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.46</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.42</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.34</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.44</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.90</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.93</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.33</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.60</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">35</td> <td class="tcl rb">Yellow turnips</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.48</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.93</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.55</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.31</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.34</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.34</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.00</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.93</td> <td class="tcc rb">0.33</td> <td class="tcr rb">(4.60)</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb bb">36</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">White turnips</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">4.03</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0.84</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3.19</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3.87</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1.12</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">0.31</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0.81</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">6.72</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">0.33</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">6.39</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">10</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Cheese and Cheese-Making</p>
+
+<p>For generations, perhaps for centuries, the question has been
+discussed as to why there should be so large a proportion of bad
+and inferior cheese and so small a proportion of really good cheese
+made in farmhouses throughout the land. That the result is
+not wholly due to skill and care or to the absence of these qualities
+on the part of the dairymaid may now be taken for granted.
+Instances might be quoted in which the most painstaking of
+dairymaids, in the cleanest of dairies, have failed to produce
+cheese of even second-rate quality and character, and yet others
+in which excellent cheese has been made under commonplace
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page746" id="page746"></a>746</span>
+conditions as to skill and equipment, and with not much regard
+to cleanliness in the dairy. The explanation of what was so
+long a mystery has been found in the domain of ferments. It
+is now known that whilst various micro-organisms, which in
+many dairies have free access to the milk, have ruined an incalculable
+quantity of cheese&mdash;and of butter also&mdash;neither cheese
+nor butter of first-rate quality can be made without the aid
+of lactic acid bacilli. As an illustrative case, mention may be
+made of that of two most painstaking dairymaids who had tried
+in vain to make good cheese from the freshest of milk in the
+cleanest of dairies in North Lancashire. Advice to resort to
+the use of the ferment was acted upon, and the result was a
+revelation and a transformation, excellent prize-winning cheese
+being made from that time forward. By the addition of a
+&ldquo;starter,&rdquo; in the form of a small quantity of sour milk, whey
+or buttermilk, in an advanced stage of fermentation, the development
+of acidity in the main body of milk is accelerated. It
+has been ascertained that the starter is practically a culture
+of bacteria, which, if desired, may be obtained as a pure culture.
+Professor J. R. Campbell, as the result of experiments on pure
+cultures for Cheddar cheese-making, states<a name="fa7a" id="fa7a" href="#ft7a"><span class="sp">7</span></a> that (1) first-class
+Cheddar cheese can be made by using pure cultures of a lactic
+organism; (2) this organism abounds in all samples of sour
+milk and sour whey; (3) the use of a whey starter is attended
+with results equal in every respect to those obtained from a
+milk-starter. It is well within the power of any dairyman to
+prepare what is practically a pure culture of the same bacterium
+as is supplied from the laboratory. Moreover, the sour-whey
+starter used by some of the successful cheese-makers before the
+introduction of the American system is in effect a pure culture,
+from which it follows that these men had, by empirical methods,
+attained the same end as that to which bacteriological research
+subsequently led. Wherever a starter is
+necessary, the use of a culture practically
+pure is imperative, whether such culture
+be obtained from the laboratory or prepared
+by what may be called the &ldquo;home-made
+starter.&rdquo; Pure cultures may be
+bought for a few shillings in the open
+market.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table IX.</span>&mdash;<i>Comparison of the Estimates of Total or Original
+Manure-Value when Foods are
+consumed for the Production of Fattening Increase, with those when the Food is consumed
+by Cows giving different Yields of Milk.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3">Nos.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3">Description<br />of Food.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="18">Total or Original Manure-Value per Ton of Food<br />
+ consumed&mdash;that is, only deducting the Constituents<br />
+ in Fattening Increase or in Milk.<br /></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" colspan="3" rowspan="2">For the<br />Production<br />of<br />Fattening<br />Increase.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb" colspan="15">For the Production of Milk, supposing<br />
+ the Yield per Head per Day to be as under&mdash;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">6 qts.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">8 qts.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">10 qts.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">12 qts.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="3">14 qts.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcl rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td> <td class="tcr">£</td> <td class="tcr">s.</td> <td class="tcr rb">d.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">1</td> <td class="tcl rb">Linseed</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">2</td> <td class="tcl rb">Linseed cake</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">3</td> <td class="tcl rb">Decorticated cotton cake</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">4</td> <td class="tcl rb">Palm-nut cake</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">5</td> <td class="tcl rb">Undecorticated cotton cake</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">6</td> <td class="tcl rb">Cocoa-nut cake</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">7</td> <td class="tcl rb">Rape cake</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">8</td> <td class="tcl rb">Peas</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">9</td> <td class="tcl rb">Beans</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">10</td> <td class="tcl rb">Lentils</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">11</td> <td class="tcl rb">Tares (seed)</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">12</td> <td class="tcl rb">Maize</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">13</td> <td class="tcl rb">Wheat</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">14</td> <td class="tcl rb">Malt</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">15</td> <td class="tcl rb">Barley</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">16</td> <td class="tcl rb">Oats</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">17</td> <td class="tcl rb">Rice meal</td> <td class="tcr">(0</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">6)</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">18</td> <td class="tcl rb">Locust beans</td> <td class="tcc rb" colspan="3">..</td> <td class="tcc rb" colspan="3">..</td> <td class="tcc rb" colspan="3">..</td> <td class="tcc rb" colspan="3">..</td> <td class="tcc rb" colspan="3">..</td> <td class="tcc rb" colspan="3">..</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">19</td> <td class="tcl rb">Malt coombs</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">20</td> <td class="tcl rb">Fine pollard</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">21</td> <td class="tcl rb">Coarse pollard</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">22</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bran</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">23</td> <td class="tcl rb">Clover hay</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">24</td> <td class="tcl rb">Meadow hay</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">15</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">25</td> <td class="tcl rb">Pea straw</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">26</td> <td class="tcl rb">Oat straw</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">27</td> <td class="tcl rb">Wheat straw</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">28</td> <td class="tcl rb">Barley straw</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">5</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">29</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bean straw</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">10</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">30</td> <td class="tcl rb">Potatoes</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">31</td> <td class="tcl rb">Carrots</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">32</td> <td class="tcl rb">Parsnips</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">33</td> <td class="tcl rb">Mangel wurzels</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">10</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">34</td> <td class="tcl rb">Swedish turnips</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">8</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">7</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">35</td> <td class="tcl rb">Yellow turnips</td> <td class="tcr">(0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">6)</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr">0</td> <td class="tcr">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb bb">36</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">White turnips</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">5</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">4</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2</td> <td class="tcr bb">0</td> <td class="tcr bb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The factory-made cheese of Canada,
+the United States and Australasia, which
+is so largely imported into the United
+Kingdom, is all of the Cheddar type. The
+factory system has made no headway in
+the original home of the Cheddar cheese
+in the west of England. The system was
+thus described in the <i>Journal</i> of the
+British Dairy Farmers&rsquo; Association in
+1889 by Mr R. J. Drummond:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>&ldquo;In the year 1885 I was engaged as cheese
+instructor by the Ayrshire Dairy Association,
+to teach the Canadian system of
+Cheddar cheese-making. I commenced
+operations under many difficulties, being a
+total stranger to both the people and the
+country, and with this, the quantities of
+milk were very much less than I had been
+in the habit of handling. Instead of having
+the milk from 500 to 1000 cows, we had to
+operate with the milk from 25 to not over
+60 cows.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The system of cheese-making commonly
+practised in the county of Ayr at that time
+was what is commonly known as the Joseph
+Harding or English Cheddar system, which
+differs from the Canadian system in many
+details, and in one particular is essentially
+different, namely, the manner in which the
+necessary acidity in the milk is produced.
+In the old method a certain quantity of
+sour whey was added to the milk each day
+before adding the rennet, and I have no
+doubt in my own mind that this whey was
+often added when the milk was already acid
+enough, and the consequence was a spoiled
+cheese.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Another objection to this system of
+adding sour whey was, should the stuff be
+out of condition one day, the same trouble
+was inoculated with the milk from day to
+day, and the result was sure to be great
+unevenness in the quality of the cheese.
+The utensils commonly in use were very
+different to anything I had ever seen before;
+instead of the oblong cheese vat with double
+casings, as is used by the best makers at
+the present time, a tub, sometimes of tin
+and sometimes of wood, from 4 to 7 ft. in diameter by about
+30 in. deep, was universally in use. Instead of being able to heat
+the milk with warm water or steam, as is commonly done now, a
+large can of a capacity of from 20 to 30 gallons was filled with cold
+milk and placed in a common hot-water boiler, and heated sufficiently
+to bring the whole body of the milk in the tub to the desired temperature
+for adding the rennet. I found that many mistakes were
+made in the quantity of rennet used, as scarcely any two makers
+used the same quantity to a given quantity of milk. Instead of
+having a graduated measure for measuring the rennet, a common
+tea-cup was used for this purpose, and I have found in some dairies
+as low as 3 oz. of rennet was used to 100 gallons of milk, where in
+others as high as 6½ oz. was used to the same quantity. This of itself
+would cause a difference in the quality of the cheese.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Coagulation and breaking completed, the second heating was
+effected by dipping the whey from the curd into the can already
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page747" id="page747"></a>747</span>
+mentioned, and heated to a temperature of 140° F., and returned
+to the curd, and thus the process was carried on till the desired
+temperature was reached. This mode of heating I considered
+very laborious and at the same time very unsatisfactory, as it is
+impossible to distribute the heat as evenly through the curd in this
+way as by heating either with hot water or steam. The other general
+features of the method do not differ from our own very materially,
+with the exception that in the old method the curd was allowed to
+mature in the bottom of the tub, where at the same stage we remove
+the curd from the vat to what we call a curd-cooler, made with a
+sparred bottom, so as to allow the whey to separate from the curd
+during the maturing or ripening process. In regard to the quality
+of cheese on the one method compared with the other, I think that
+there was some cheese just as fine made in the old way as anything
+we can possibly make in the new, with one exception, and that is,
+that the cheese made according to the old method will not toast&mdash;instead
+of the casein melting down with the butter-fat, the two
+become separated, which is very much objected to by the consumer&mdash;and,
+with this, want of uniformity through the whole dairy. This
+is a very short and imperfect description of how the cheese was made
+at the time I came into Ayrshire; and I will now give a short description
+of the system that has been taught by myself for the past
+four years, and has been the means of bringing this county so
+prominently to the front as one of the best cheese-making counties
+in Britain.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Our duty in this system of cheese-making begins the night
+before, in having the milk properly set and cooled according to the
+temperature of the atmosphere, so as to arrive at a given heat the
+next morning. Our object in this is to secure, at the time we wish
+to begin work in the morning, that degree of acidity or ripeness
+essential to the success of the whole operation. We cannot give any
+definite guide to makers how, or in what quantities, to set their milk,
+as the whole thing depends on the good judgment of the operator.
+If he finds that his milk works best at a temperature of 68° F. in
+the morning, his study the night before should tend toward such a
+result, and he will soon learn by experience how best to manage
+the milk in his own individual dairy. I have found in some dairies
+that the milk worked quite fast enough at a temperature of 64° in
+the morning, where in others the milk set in the same way would be
+very much out of condition by being too sweet, causing hours of
+delay before matured enough to add the rennet. Great care should
+be taken at this point, making sure that the milk is properly matured
+before the rennet is added, as impatience at this stage often causes
+hours of delay in the making of a cheese. I advise taking about
+six hours from the time the rennet is added till the curd is ready for
+salting, which means a six-hours&rsquo; process; if much longer than this,
+I have found by experience that it is impossible to obtain the best
+results. The cream should always be removed from the night&rsquo;s milk
+in the morning and heated to a temperature of about 84° before
+returning it to the vat. To do this properly and with safety, the
+cream should be heated by adding about two-thirds of warm milk
+as it comes from the cow to one-third of cream, and passed through
+the ordinary milk-strainers. If colouring matter is used, it should be
+added fifteen to twenty minutes before the rennet, so as to become
+thoroughly mingled with the milk before coagulation takes place.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We use from 4 to 4½ oz. of Hansen&rsquo;s rennet extract to each
+100 gallons of milk, at a temperature of 86° in spring and 84° in
+summer, or sufficient to coagulate milk firm enough to cut in about
+forty minutes when in a proper condition. In cutting, great care
+should be taken not to bruise the curd. I cut lengthwise, then
+across with perpendicular knife, then with horizontal knife the
+same way of the perpendicular, leaving the curd in small cubes
+about the size of ordinary peas. Stirring with the hands should
+begin immediately after cutting, and continue for ten to fifteen
+minutes prior to the application of heat. At this stage we use a
+rake instead of the hands for stirring the curd during the heating
+process, which lasts about one hour from the time of beginning until
+the desired temperature of 100° or 102° is reached. After heating,
+the curd should be stirred another twenty minutes, so as to become
+properly firm before allowing it to settle. We like the curd to lie
+in the whey fully one hour after allowing it to settle before it is
+ready for drawing the whey, which is regulated altogether by the
+condition of the milk at the time the rennet is added. At the first
+indication of acid, the whey should be removed as quickly as possible.
+I think at this point lies the greatest secret of cheese-making&mdash;to
+know when to draw the whey.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I depend entirely on the hot-iron test at this stage, as I consider
+it the most accurate and reliable guide known to determine when
+the proper acidity has been developed. To apply this test, take a
+piece of steel bar about 18 in. long by 1 in. wide and ¼ in. thick, and
+heat to a black heat; if the iron is too hot, it will burn the curd;
+if too cold, it will not stick; consequently it is a very simple matter
+to determine the proper heat. Take a small quantity of the curd
+from the vat and compress it tightly in the hand, so as to expel all
+the whey; press the curd against the iron, and when acid enough
+it will draw fine silky threads ¼ in. long. At this stage the curd
+should be removed to the curd-cooler as quickly as possible, and
+stirred till dry enough to allow it to mat, which generally takes from
+five to eight minutes. The curd is now allowed to stand in one end
+of the cooler for thirty minutes, when it is cut into pieces from 6 to
+8 in. square and turned, and so on every half-hour until it is fit for
+milling. After removing the whey, a new acid makes its appearance
+in the body of the curd, which seems to depend for its development
+upon the action of the air, and the presence of which experience has
+shown to be an essential element in the making of a cheese. This
+acid should be allowed to develop properly before the addition of
+salt. To determine when the curd is ready for salting, the hot-iron
+test is again resorted to; and when the curd will draw fine silky
+threads 1½ in. long, and at the same time have a soft velvety feel
+when pressed in the hand, the butter-fat will not separate with the
+whey from the curd. I generally advise using 1 &#8468; of salt to 50 &#8468; of
+curd, more or less, according to the condition of the curd. After
+salting, we let the curd lie fifteen minutes, so as to allow the salt to
+be thoroughly dissolved before pressing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In the pressing, care should be taken not to press the curd too
+severely at first, as you are apt to lose some of the butter-fat, and
+with this I do not think that the whey will come away so freely by
+heavy pressing at first. We advise three days&rsquo; pressing before
+cheese is taken to the curing-room. All cheese should have a bath
+in water at a temperature of 120° next morning after being made,
+so as to form a good skin to prevent cracking or chipping. The
+temperature of the curing-room should be kept as near 60° as
+possible at all seasons of the year, and I think it a good plan to
+ventilate while heating.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>With regard to the hot-iron test for acidity, Mr F. J. Lloyd,
+in describing his investigations on behalf of the Bath and West
+of England Society, states that cheese-makers have long known
+that in both the manufacture and the ripening of cheese the
+acidity produced&mdash;known to the chemist as &ldquo;lactic acid&rdquo;&mdash;materially
+influences the results obtained, and that amongst
+other drawbacks to the test referred to is the uncertainty of the
+temperature of the iron itself. He gives an account,<a name="fa8a" id="fa8a" href="#ft8a"><span class="sp">8</span></a> however,
+of a chemical method involving the use of a standard solution
+of an alkali (soda), and of a substance termed an &ldquo;indicator&rdquo;
+(phenolphthalein), which changes colour according to whether
+a solution is acid or alkaline. The apparatus used with these
+reagents is called the acidimeter. The two stages in the manufacture
+of a Cheddar cheese most difficult to determine empirically
+are&mdash;(1) when to stop stirring and to draw the whey, and
+(2) when to grind the curd. The introduction of the acidimeter
+has done away with these difficulties; and though the use of
+this apparatus is not actually a condition essential to the manufacture
+of a good cheese, it is to many makers a necessity and to
+all an advantage. By its use the cheese-maker can determine
+the acidity of the whey, and so decide when to draw the latter
+off, and will thus secure not only the proper development of
+acidity in the subsequent changes of cheese-making, but also
+materially diminish the time which the cheese takes to make.
+Furthermore, it has been proved that the acidity of the whey
+which drains from the curd when in the cooler is a sufficiently
+accurate guide to the condition of the curd before grinding;
+and by securing uniformity in this acidity the maker will also
+ensure uniformity in the quality and ripening properties of the
+cheese. Speaking generally, the acidity of the liquid from
+the press should never fall below 0.80% nor rise above 1.20%,
+and, the nearer it can be kept to 1.00% the better. Simultaneously,
+of course, strict attention must be paid to temperature,
+time and every other factor which can be accurately determined.
+Analyses of large numbers of Cheddar cheeses manufactured
+in every month of the cheese-making season show the average
+composition of ripe specimens to be&mdash;water, 35.58%; fat,
+31.33; casein, 29.12; mineral matter or ash, 3.97. It has been
+maintained that in the ripening of Cheddar cheese fat is formed
+out of the curd, but a comparison of analyses of ripe cheeses
+with analyses of the curd from which the cheeses were made
+affords no evidence that this is the case.</p>
+
+<p>The quantity of milk required to make 1 &#8468; of Cheddar cheese
+may be learnt from Table X., which shows the results obtained
+at the cheese school of the Bath and West of England Society
+in the two seasons of 1899 and 1900. The cheese was sold at an
+average age of ten to twelve weeks. In 1899 a total of 21,220
+gallons of milk yielded 20,537 &#8468; of saleable cheese, and in 1900,
+31,808 gallons yielded 29,631 &#8468;. In the two years together
+53,028 gallons yielded 50,168 &#8468;, which is equivalent to 1.05
+gallon of milk to 1 &#8468; of cheese. For practical purposes it may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page748" id="page748"></a>748</span>
+be taken that one gallon, or slightly over 10 &#8468; of milk, yields
+1 &#8468; of pressed cheese. The prices obtained are added as a matter
+of interest.</p>
+
+<p>Cheshire cheese is largely made in the county from which it
+takes its name, and in adjoining districts. It is extensively
+consumed in Manchester and Liverpool, and other parts of the
+densely populated county of Lancaster.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table X.</span>&mdash;<i>Quantities of Milk employed and of Cheese produced in the Manufacture
+of Cheddar Cheese.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">When Made.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Green<br />Cheese.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Saleable<br />Cheese.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Shrinkage.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Price.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">galls.</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&#8468;</td> <td class="tcl rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">per cwt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">April 1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">3077</td> <td class="tcc rb">3100</td> <td class="tcc rb">2924</td> <td class="tcl rb">6 per cent.</td> <td class="tcc rb">60s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">May</td> <td class="tcc rb">4462</td> <td class="tcc rb">4502</td> <td class="tcc rb">4257</td> <td class="tcl rb">6½ &#8468; per cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">63s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">June</td> <td class="tcc rb">4316</td> <td class="tcc rb">4434</td> <td class="tcc rb">4141</td> <td class="tcl rb">7 &#8468; 6 oz. per cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">70s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">July</td> <td class="tcc rb">3699</td> <td class="tcc rb">3785</td> <td class="tcc rb">3545</td> <td class="tcl rb">7 &#8468; 2 oz. per cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">74s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">August</td> <td class="tcc rb">2495</td> <td class="tcc rb">2539</td> <td class="tcc rb">2353</td> <td class="tcl rb">8 &#8468; 3 oz. per cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">74s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sept. and Oct.</td> <td class="tcc rb">3171</td> <td class="tcc rb">3583</td> <td class="tcc rb">3317</td> <td class="tcl rb">8 &#8468; 5 oz. per cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">74s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">April 1900</td> <td class="tcc rb">3651</td> <td class="tcc rb">3505</td> <td class="tcc rb">3292</td> <td class="tcl rb">6 per cent.</td> <td class="tcc rb">63s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">May</td> <td class="tcc rb">6027</td> <td class="tcc rb">6048</td> <td class="tcc rb">5577</td> <td class="tcl rb">7¾ per cent.</td> <td class="tcc rb">64s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">June</td> <td class="tcc rb">5960</td> <td class="tcc rb">5889</td> <td class="tcc rb">5466</td> <td class="tcl rb">7¼ per cent.</td> <td class="tcc rb">68s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">July and Aug.</td> <td class="tcc rb">7227</td> <td class="tcc rb">7177</td> <td class="tcc rb">6630</td> <td class="tcl rb">7½ per cent.</td> <td class="tcc rb">66s.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Sept. and Oct.</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">8943</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">9635</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">8666</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">10 per cent.</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">66s.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The following is a description of the making of Cheshire
+cheese:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The evening&rsquo;s milk is set apart until the following morning, when
+the cream is skimmed off. The latter is poured into a pan which
+has been heated by being placed in the boiling water of a boiler.
+The new milk obtained early in the morning is poured into the vessel
+containing the previous evening&rsquo;s milk with the warmed cream,
+and the temperature of the mixture is brought to about 75° F.
+Into the vessel is introduced a piece of rennet, which has been kept
+in warm water since the preceding evening, and in which a little
+Spanish annatto (¼ oz. is enough for a cheese of 60 &#8468;) is dissolved.
+(Marigolds, boiled in milk, are occasionally used for colouring cheese,
+to which they likewise impart a pleasant flavour. In winter, carrots
+scraped and boiled in milk, and afterwards strained, will produce
+a richer colour; but they should be used with moderation, on
+account of their taste.) The whole is now stirred together, and
+covered up warm for about an hour, or until it becomes curdled;
+it is then turned over with a bowl and broken very small. After
+standing a little time, the whey is drawn from it, and as soon as
+the curd becomes somewhat more solid it is cut into slices and turned
+over repeatedly, the better to press out the whey.</p>
+
+<p>The curd is then removed from the tub, broken by hand or cut
+by a curd-breaker into small pieces, and put into a cheese vat,
+where it is strongly pressed both by hand and with weights, in order
+to extract the remaining whey. After this it is transferred to
+another vat, or into the same if it has in the meantime been well
+scalded, where a similar process of breaking and expressing is
+repeated, until all the whey is forced from it. The cheese is now
+turned into a third vat, previously warmed, with a cloth beneath
+it, and a thin loop of binder put round the upper edge of the cheese
+and within the sides of the vat, the cheese itself being previously
+enclosed in a clean cloth, and its edges placed within the vat, before
+transfer to the cheese-oven. These various processes occupy about
+six hours, and eight more are requisite for pressing the cheese, under
+a weight of 14 or 15 cwt. The cheese during that time should be
+twice turned in the vat. Holes are bored in the vat which contains
+the cheese, and also in the cover of it, to facilitate the extraction of
+every drop of whey. The pressure being continued, the cheese is
+at length taken from the vat as a firm and solid mass.</p>
+
+<p>On the following morning and evening it must be again turned
+and pressed; and also on the third day, about the middle of which
+it should be removed to the salting-chamber, where the outside is
+well rubbed with salt, and a cloth binder passed round it which is
+not turned over the upper surface. The cheese is then placed in
+brine extending half-way up in a salting-tub, and the upper surface
+is thickly covered with salt. Here it remains for nearly a week,
+being turned twice in the day. It is then left to dry for two or three
+days, during which period it is turned once&mdash;being well salted at
+each turning&mdash;and cleaned every day. When taken from the brine
+it is put on the salting benches, with a wooden girth round it of
+nearly the thickness of the cheese, where it stands a few days, during
+which time it is again salted and turned every day. It is next
+washed and dried; and after remaining on the drying benches
+about seven days, it is once more washed in warm water with a brush,
+and wiped dry. In a couple of hours after this it is rubbed all over
+with sweet whey butter, which operation is afterwards frequently
+repeated; and, lastly, it is deposited in the cheese- or store-room&mdash;which
+should be moderately warm and sheltered from the access of
+air, lest the cheese should crack&mdash;and turned every day, until it has
+become sufficiently hard and firm. These cheeses require to be kept
+a considerable time.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, there are three different modes of cheese-making
+followed in Cheshire, known as the <i>early</i> ripening, the <i>medium</i>
+ripening and the <i>late</i> ripening processes. There is also a method
+which produces a cheese that is permeated with &ldquo;green mould&rdquo;
+when ripe, called &ldquo;Stilton Cheshire&rdquo;; this, however, is confined to
+limited districts in the county. The early ripening method is generally
+followed in the spring of the year, until the middle or end of April;
+the medium process, from that time till late autumn, or until early in
+June, when the late ripening process is adopted and followed until the
+end of September, changing again to the medium process
+as the season advances. The late ripening process is not
+found to be suitable for spring or late autumn make.
+There is a decided difference between these several
+methods of making. In the early ripening system a
+larger quantity of rennet is used, more acidity is developed,
+and less pressure employed than in the other
+processes. In the medium ripening process a moderate
+amount of acidity is developed, to cause the natural
+drainage of the whey from the curd when under press.
+In the late ripening system, on the other hand, the
+development of acidity is prevented as far as possible,
+and the whey is got out of the curd by breaking down
+finer, using more heat, and skewering when under press.
+In the Stilton Cheshire process a larger quantity of
+rennet is used, and less pressure is employed, than in the
+medium or late ripening systems.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is hardly possible to enunciate any general rules for
+the making of Stilton cheese, which differs from Cheddar
+and Cheshire in that it is not subjected to pressure. Mr J. Marshall
+Dugdale, in 1899, made a visit of inspection to the chief Leicestershire
+dairies where this cheese is produced, but in his report<a name="fa9a" id="fa9a" href="#ft9a"><span class="sp">9</span></a> he
+stated that every Stilton cheese-maker worked on his own lines,
+and that at no two dairies did he find the details all carried out
+in the same manner. There is a fair degree of uniformity up to
+the point when the curd is ladled into the straining-cloths, but
+at this stage, and in the treatment of the curd before salting,
+diversity sets in, several different methods being in successful
+use. Most of the cheese is made from two curds, the highly acid
+curd from the morning&rsquo;s milk <span class="correction" title="duplicate word being removed">being</span> mixed with the comparatively
+sweet curd from the evening&rsquo;s milk. Opinion varies widely
+as to the degree of tightening of the straining-cloths. No test for
+acidity appears to be used, the amount of acidity being judged
+by the taste, feel and smell of the curd. When the desired degree
+of acidity has developed, the curd is broken by hand to pieces
+the size of small walnuts, and salt is added at the rate of about
+1 oz. to 4 &#8468; of dry curd, or 1 oz. to 3½ &#8468; of wet curd, care being
+taken not to get the curd pasty. If a maker has learnt how to
+rennet the milk properly, and how to secure the right amount of
+acidity at the time of hooping&mdash;that is, when the broken and
+salted curd is put into the wooden hoops which give the cheese
+its shape&mdash;he has acquired probably two of the most important
+details necessary to success. It was formerly the custom to add
+cream to the milk used for making Stilton cheese, but the more
+general practice now is to employ new milk alone, which yields a
+product apparently as excellent and mellow as that from enriched
+milk.</p>
+
+<p>As a cheese matures or becomes fit for consumption, not only
+is there produced the characteristic flavour peculiar to the type
+of cheese concerned, but with all varieties, independently of the
+quality of flavours developed, a profound physical transformation
+of the casein occurs. In the course of this change the firm
+elastic curd &ldquo;breaks down&rdquo;&mdash;that is, becomes plastic, whilst
+chemically the insoluble casein is converted into various soluble
+decomposition products. These ripening phenomena&mdash;the production
+of flavour and the breaking down of the casein (that is,
+the formation of proper texture)&mdash;used to be regarded as different
+phases of the same process. As subsequently shown, however,
+these changes are not necessarily so closely correlated. The
+theories formerly advanced as explanatory of the ripening
+changes in cheese were suggestive rather than based upon experimental
+data, and it is only since 1896 that careful scientific
+studies of the problem have been made. Of the two existing
+theories, the one, which is essentially European, ascribes the
+ripening changes wholly to the action of living organisms&mdash;the
+bacteria present in the cheese. The other, which had its origin
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page749" id="page749"></a>749</span>
+in the United States, asserts that there are digestive enzymes&mdash;that
+is, unorganized or soluble ferments&mdash;inherent in the milk
+itself that render the casein soluble. The supporters of the
+bacterial theory are ranged in two classes. The one, led by
+Duclaux, regards the breaking down of the casein as due to the
+action of liquefying bacteria (Tyrothrix forms). On the other
+hand, von Freudenreich has ascribed these changes to the lactic-acid
+type of bacteria, which develop so luxuriantly in hard cheese
+like Cheddar.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the American theory, and in view of the
+important practical results obtained by Babcock and Russell at
+the Wisconsin experiment station, the following account<a name="fa10a" id="fa10a" href="#ft10a"><span class="sp">10</span></a> of
+their work is of interest, especially as the subject is of high
+practical importance. In 1897 they announced the discovery of
+an inherent enzyme in milk, which they named <i>galactase</i>, and
+which has the power of digesting the casein of milk, and producing
+chemical decomposition products similar to those that normally
+occur in ripened cheese. The theory has been advanced by them
+that this enzyme is an important factor in the ripening changes;
+and as in their experiments bacterial action was excluded by the
+use of anaesthetic agents, they conclude that, so far as the
+breaking down of the casein is concerned, bacteria are not
+essential to this process. In formulating a theory of cheese-ripening,
+they have further pointed out the necessity of considering
+the action of rennet extract as a factor concerned in
+the curing changes. They have shown that the addition of
+increased quantities of rennet extract materially hastens the
+rate of ripening, and that this is due to the pepsin which is
+present in all commercial rennet extracts. They find it easily
+possible to differentiate between the proteolytic action&mdash;that is,
+the decomposing of proteids&mdash;of pepsin and galactase, in that
+the first-named enzyme is incapable of producing decomposition
+products lower than the peptones precipitated by tannin. They
+have shown that the increased solubility&mdash;the ripening changes&mdash;of
+the casein in cheese made with rennet is attributable solely
+to the products peculiar to peptic digestion. The addition of
+rennet extract or pepsin to fresh milk does not produce this
+change, unless the acidity of the milk is allowed to develop to a
+point which experience has shown to be the best adapted to the
+making of Cheddar cheese. The <i>rationale</i> of the empirical process
+of ripening the milk before the addition of the rennet is thus
+explained. In studying the properties of galactase it was further
+found that this enzyme, as well as those present in rennet extract,
+is operative at very low temperatures, even below freezing-point.
+When cheese made in the normal manner was kept at temperatures
+ranging from 25° to 45° F. for periods averaging from eight
+to eighteen months, it was found that the texture of the product
+simulated that of a perfectly ripened cheese, but that such cheese
+developed a very mild flavour in comparison with the normally-cured
+product. Subsequent storage at somewhat higher temperatures
+gives to such cheese a flavour the intensity of which is
+determined by the duration of storage. This indicates that the
+breaking down of the casein and the production of the flavour
+peculiar to cheese are in a way independent of each other, and
+may be independently controlled&mdash;a point of great economic
+importance in commercial practice. Although it is generally
+believed that cheese ripened at low temperatures is apt to develop
+a more or less bitter flavour, the flavours in the cases described
+were found to be practically perfect. Under these conditions of
+curing, bacterial activity is inoperative, and these experiments
+are held to furnish an independent proof of the enzyme theory.</p>
+
+<p>Not only are these investigations of interest from the scientific
+standpoint, as throwing light on the obscure processes of cheese-curing,
+but from a practical point of view they open up a new
+field for commercial exploitation. The inability to control the
+temperature in the ordinary factory curing-room results in serious
+losses, on account of the poor and uneven quality of the product,
+and the consumption of cheese has been greatly lessened thereby.
+These conditions may all be avoided by this low-temperature
+curing process, and it is not improbable that the cheese industry
+may undergo important changes in methods of treatment. With
+the introduction of cold-storage curing, and the necessity of
+constructing centralized plant for this purpose, the cheese
+industry may perhaps come to be differentiated into the manufacture
+of the product in factories of relatively cheap construction,
+and the curing or ripening of the cheese in central curing
+stations. In this way not only would the losses which occur
+under present practices be obviated, but the improvement in
+the quality of the cured product would be more than sufficient
+to cover the cost of cold-storage curing.</p>
+
+<p>The characteristics of typical specimens of the different kinds
+of English cheese may be briefly described. Cheddar cheese
+possesses the aroma and flavour of a nut&mdash;the so-called &ldquo;nutty&rdquo;
+flavour. It should melt in the mouth, and taste neither sweet
+nor acid. It is of flaky texture, neither hard nor crumbly, and is
+firm to the touch. It is early-ripening and, if not too much acid
+is developed in the making, long-keeping. Before all others it
+is a cosmopolitan cheese. Some cheeses are &ldquo;plain,&rdquo; that is,
+they possess the natural paleness of the curd, but many are
+coloured with annatto&mdash;a practice that might be dispensed with.
+The average weight of a Cheddar cheese is about 70 &#8468;. Stilton
+cheese is popularly but erroneously supposed to be commonly
+made from morning&rsquo;s whole milk with evening&rsquo;s cream added,
+and to be a &ldquo;double-cream&rdquo; cheese. The texture is waxy, and
+a blue-green mould permeates the mass if well ripened; the
+flavour is suggestive of decay. The average weight of a Stilton
+is 15 &#8468;. Cheshire cheese has a fairly firm and uniform texture,
+neither flaky on the one hand nor waxy on the other; is of
+somewhat sharp and piquant flavour when fully ripe; and is
+often&mdash;at eighteen months old, when a well-made Cheshire
+cheese is at its best&mdash;permeated with a blue-green mould, which,
+as in the case of Stilton cheese, contributes a characteristic
+flavour which is much appreciated. Cheshire cheese is, like
+Cheddar, sometimes highly-coloured, but the practice is quite
+unnecessary; the weight is about 55 &#8468;. Gloucester cheese has
+a firm, somewhat soapy, texture and sweet flavour. Double
+Gloucester differs from single Gloucester only in size, the former
+usually weighing 26 to 30 &#8468;, and the latter 13 to 15 &#8468;. Leicester
+cheese is somewhat loose in texture, and mellow and moist when
+nicely ripened. Its flavour is &ldquo;clean,&rdquo; sweet and mild, and its
+aroma pleasant. To those who prefer a mild flavour in cheese, a
+perfect Leicester is perhaps the most attractive of all the so-called
+&ldquo;hard&rdquo; cheese; the average weight of such a cheese is
+about 35 &#8468;. Derby cheese in its best forms is much like Leicester,
+being &ldquo;clean&rdquo; in flavour and mellow. It is sometimes rather
+flaky in texture, and is slow-ripening and long-keeping if made
+on the old lines; the average weight is 25 &#8468;. Lancashire cheese,
+when well made and ripe, is loose in texture and is mellow; it
+has a piquant flavour. As a rule it ripens early and does not
+keep long. Dorset cheese&mdash;sometimes called &ldquo;blue vinny&rdquo; (or
+veiny)&mdash;is of firm texture, blue-moulded, and rather sharp-flavoured
+when fully ripe; it has local popularity and the best
+makes are rather like Stilton. Wensleydale cheese, a local product
+in North Yorkshire, is of fairly firm texture and mild flavour,
+and may almost be spread with a knife when ripe; the finest
+makes are equal to the best Stilton. Cotherstone cheese, also a
+Yorkshire product, is very much like Stilton and commonly
+preferable to it. The blue-green mould develops, and the cheese
+is fairly mellow and moist, whereas many Stiltons are hard and
+dry. Wiltshire cheese, in the form of &ldquo;Wilts truckles,&rdquo; may be
+described as small Cheddars, the weight being usually about
+16 &#8468;. Caerphilly cheese is a thin, flat product, having the appearance
+of an undersized single Gloucester and weighing about
+8 &#8468;; it has no very marked characteristics, but enters largely
+into local consumption amongst the mining population of
+Glamorganshire and Monmouthshire. Soft cheese of various
+kinds is made in many localities, beyond which its reputation
+scarcely extends. One of the oldest and best, somewhat resembling
+Camembert when well ripened, is the little &ldquo;Slipcote,&rdquo;
+made on a small scale in the county of Rutland; it is a soft,
+mellow, moist cheese, its coat slipping off readily when the cheese
+is at its best for eating&mdash;hence the name. Cream cheese is likewise
+made in many districts, but nowhere to a great extent. A
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page750" id="page750"></a>750</span>
+good cream cheese is fairly firm but mellow, with a slightly acid
+yet very attractive flavour. It is the simplest of all cheese to
+make&mdash;cream poured into a perforated box lined with loose
+muslin practically makes itself into cheese in a few days&rsquo; time,
+and is usually ripe in a week.</p>
+
+<p>In France the pressed varieties of cheese with hard rinds
+include Gruyère, Cantal, Roquefort and Port Salut. The first-named,
+a pale-yellow cheese full of holes of varying size, is made
+in Switzerland and in the Jura Mountains district in the east of
+France; whilst Cantal cheese, which is of lower quality, is a
+product of the midland districts and is made barrel-shape.
+Roquefort cheese is made from the milk of ewes, which are kept
+chiefly as dairy animals in the department of Aveyron, and the
+cheese is cured in the natural mountain caves at the village of
+Roquefort. It is a small, rather soft, white cheese, abundantly
+veined with a greenish-blue mould and weighs between 4 and
+5 &#8468;. The Port Salut is quite a modern cheese, which originated
+in the abbey of that name in Mayenne; it is a thin, flat cheese
+of characteristic, and not unattractive odour and flavour. The
+best known of the soft unpressed cheeses are Brie, Camembert
+and Coulommiers, whilst Pont l&rsquo;Evêque, Livarot and other
+varieties are also made. After being shaped in moulds of various
+forms, these cheeses are laid on straw mats to cure, and when
+fit to eat they possess about the same consistency as butter.
+The Neufchâtel, Gervais and Bondon cheeses are soft varieties
+intended to be eaten quite fresh, like cream cheese.</p>
+
+<p>Of the varieties of cheese made in Switzerland, the best known
+is the Emmenthaler, which is about the size of a cart-wheel, and
+has a weight varying from 150 to 300 &#8468;. It is full of small
+holes of almost uniform size and very regularly distributed. In
+colour and flavour it is the same as Gruyère. The Edam and
+Gouda are the common cheeses of Holland. The Edam is
+spherical in shape, weighs from 3 to 4 &#8468;, and is usually dyed
+crimson on the outside. The Gouda is a flat cheese with convex
+edges and is of any weight up to 20 &#8468;. Of the two, the Edam
+has the finer flavour. Limburger is the leading German cheese,
+whilst other varieties are the Backstein and Munster; all are
+strong-smelling. Parmesan cheese is an Italian product, round
+and flat, about 5 in. thick, weighing from 60 to 80 &#8468; and
+possessed of fine flavour. Gorgonzola cheese, so called from the
+Italian town of that name near Milan, is made in the Cheddar
+shape and weighs from 20 to 40 &#8468;. When ripe it is permeated
+by a blue mould, and resembles in flavour, appearance and
+consistency a rich old Stilton.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>For descriptions of all the named varieties of cheese, see <i>Bulletin
+105 of the Bureau of Animal Industry</i> (U.S. Department of Agriculture,
+Washington), issued 27th of June 1908, compiled by C. F. Doane
+and H. W. Lawson.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Butter and Butter-Making</p>
+
+<p>As with cheese, so with butter, large quantities of the latter
+have been inferior not because the cream was poor in quality,
+but because the wrong kinds of bacteria had taken possession of
+the atmosphere in hundreds of dairies. The greatest if not the
+latest novelty in dairying in the last decade of the 19th century
+was the isolation of lactic acid bacilli, their cultivation in a
+suitable medium, and their employment in cream preparatory
+to churning. Used thus in butter-making, an excellent product
+results, provided cleanliness be scrupulously maintained. The
+culture repeats itself in the buttermilk, which in turn may be
+used again with marked success. Much fine butter, indeed, was
+made long before the bearing of bacteriological science upon the
+practice of dairying was recognized&mdash;made by using acid buttermilk
+from a previous churning.</p>
+
+<p>In Denmark, which is, for its size, the greatest butter-producing
+country in the world, most of the butter is made with the aid
+of &ldquo;starters,&rdquo; or artificial cultures which are employed in
+ripening the cream. Though the butter made by such cultures
+shows little if any superiority over a good sample made from
+cream ripened in the ordinary way&mdash;that is, by keeping the
+cream at a fairly high temperature until it is ready for churning,
+when it must be cooled&mdash;it is claimed that the use of these
+cultures enables the butter-makers of Denmark to secure a much
+greater uniformity in the quality of their produce than would be
+possible if they depended upon the ripening of the cream through
+the influence of bacteria taken up in the usual way from the air.</p>
+
+<p>Butter-making is an altogether simpler process than cheese-making,
+but success demands strict attention to sound principles,
+the observance of thorough cleanliness in every stage of the
+work, and the intelligent use of the thermometer. The following
+rules for butter-making, issued by the Royal Agricultural Society
+sufficiently indicate the nature of the operation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Prepare churn, butter-worker, wooden-hands and sieve as
+follows:&mdash;(1) Rinse with cold water. (2) Scald with boiling water.
+(3) Rub thoroughly with salt. (4) Rinse with cold water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Always use a correct thermometer.</i></p>
+
+<p>The cream, when in the churn, to be at a temperature of 56° to
+58° F. in summer and 60° to 62° F. in winter. The churn should never
+be more than half full. Churn at number of revolutions suggested
+by maker of churn. If none are given, <i>churn at 40 to 45 revolutions
+per minute</i>. Always churn slowly at first.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ventilate</i> the churn <i>freely</i> and frequently during churning, until
+no air rushes out when the vent is opened.</p>
+
+<p><i>Stop churning immediately</i> the butter comes. This can be ascertained
+by the sound; if in doubt, <i>look</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The butter should now be like grains of mustard seed. Pour in
+a small quantity of cold water (1 pint of water to 2 quarts of cream)
+to harden the grains, and give a few more turns to the churn gently.</p>
+
+<p>Draw off the buttermilk, giving plenty of time for draining. Use
+a straining-cloth placed over the hair-sieve, so as to prevent any
+loss, and wash the butter in the churn with plenty of cold water:
+then draw off the water, and repeat the process until the water
+comes off quite clear.</p>
+
+<p><i>To brine butter</i>, make a strong brine, 2 to 3 &#8468; of salt to 1 gallon
+of water. Place straining-cloth over mouth of churn, pour in brine,
+put lid on churn, turn sharply half a dozen times, and leave for 10
+to 15 minutes. Then lift the butter out of the churn into sieve, turn
+butter out on worker, leave it a few minutes to drain, and work
+gently till all superfluous moisture is pressed out.</p>
+
+<p><i>To drysalt butter</i>, place butter on worker, let it drain 10 to 15
+minutes, then work gently till all the butter comes together. Place
+it on the scales and weigh; then <span class="correction" title="amended from weight">weigh</span> salt, for slight salting, ¼ oz.;
+medium, ½ oz.; heavy salting, ¾ oz. to the &#8468; of butter. Roll butter
+out on worker and carefully sprinkle salt over the surface, a little
+at a time; roll up and repeat till all the salt is used.</p>
+
+<p><i>Never touch the butter with your hands.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Well-made butter is firm and not greasy. It possesses a
+characteristic texture or &ldquo;grain,&rdquo; in virtue of which it cuts
+clean with a knife and breaks with a granular fracture, like that
+of cast-iron. Theoretically, butter should consist of little else
+than fat, but in practice this degree of perfection is never attained.
+Usually the fat ranges from 83 to 88%, whilst water is present
+to the extent of from 10 to 15%.<a name="fa11a" id="fa11a" href="#ft11a"><span class="sp">11</span></a> There will also be from 0.2
+to 0.8% of milk-sugar, and from 0.5 to 0.8% of casein. It is
+the casein which is the objectionable ingredient, and the presence
+of which is usually the cause of rancidity. In badly-washed
+or badly-worked butter, from which the buttermilk has not
+been properly removed, the proportion of casein or curd left
+in the product may be considerable, and such butter has only
+inferior keeping qualities. At the same time, the mistake may
+be made of overworking or of overwashing the butter, thereby
+depriving it of the delicacy of flavour which is one of its chief
+attractions as an article of consumption if eaten fresh. The
+object of washing with brine is that the small quantity of salt
+thus introduced shall act as a preservative and develop the
+flavour. Streaky butter may be due either to curd left in by
+imperfect washing, or to an uneven distribution of the salt.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Equipment of the Dairy</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter" colspan="2"><img style="width:519px; height:232px" src="images/img751a.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 1.</span>&mdash;Milking-Pail.</td>
+<td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 2.</span>&mdash;Milk Sieve.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:456px; height:211px" src="images/img751b.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 3.</span>&mdash;Rectangular Cheese-Vat.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:377px; height:279px" src="images/img751c.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 4.</span>&mdash;Cheese-Tub.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="flt" style="float: right; width: 357px;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:307px; height:225px" src="images/img751d.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 5.</span>&mdash;Curd-Knives.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>The improved form of milking-pail shown in fig. 1 has rests
+or brackets, which the milker when seated on his stool places
+on his knees; he thus bears the weight on his thighs, and is
+entirely relieved of the strain involved in gripping the can
+between the knees. The milk sieve or strainer (fig. 2) is used
+to remove cow-hairs and any other mechanical impurity that
+may have fallen into the milk. A double straining surface
+is provided, the second being of very fine gauze placed vertically,
+so that the pressure of the milk does not force the dirt through;
+the strainer is easily washed. The cheese tub or vat receives
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page751" id="page751"></a>751</span>
+the milk for cheese-making. The rectangular form shown
+in fig. 3 is a Cheshire cheese-vat, for steam. The inner vat is
+of tinned steel, and the outer is of iron and is fitted with pipes
+for steam supply. Round cheese-tubs (fig. 4) are made of strong
+sheets of steel, double tinned to render them lasting. They
+are fitted with a strong bottom hoop and bands round the sides,
+and can be double-jacketed for steam-heating if required. Curd-knives
+(fig. 5) are used for cutting the coagulated mass into
+cubes in order to liberate
+the whey. They are
+made of fine steel, with
+sharp edges; there are
+also wire curd-breakers.
+The object of the curd-mill
+(fig. 6) is to grind
+consolidated curd into
+small pieces, preparatory
+to salting and vatting;
+two spiked rollers
+work up to spiked
+breasts. Hoops, into
+which the curd is
+placed in order to acquire the shape of the cheese, are of
+wood or steel, the former being made of well-seasoned oak
+with iron bands (fig. 7), the latter of tinned steel. The cheese
+is more easily removed from the steel hoops and they are readily
+cleaned. The cheese-press (fig. 8) is used only for hard or
+&ldquo;pressed&rdquo; cheese, such as Cheddar. The arrangement is such
+that the pressure is continuous; in the case of soft cheese the
+curd is merely placed in moulds (figs. 9 and 10) of the required
+shape, and then taken cut to ripen, no pressure being applied.
+The cheese-room is fitted
+with easily-turned shelves,
+on which newly-made
+&ldquo;pressed&rdquo; cheeses are laid
+to ripen.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:288px; height:353px" src="images/img751e.jpg" alt="" /></td>
+<td class="figcenter"><img style="width:230px; height:130px" src="images/img751f.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 6.</span>&mdash;Curd-Mill.</td>
+<td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 7.</span>&mdash;Hoop for Flat Cheese.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td>
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:234px; height:429px" src="images/img751g.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 8.</span>&mdash;Cheese-Press.</td></tr></table></td>
+
+<td><table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:231px; height:121px" src="images/img751h.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 9.</span>&mdash;Cheese-Mould (Gervais).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:153px; height:104px" src="images/img751i.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 10.</span>&mdash;Cheese-Mould<br />
+(Pont l&rsquo;Évêque).</td></tr></table>
+
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="flt" style="float: right; width: 360px;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:311px; height:133px" src="images/img751j.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 11.</span>&mdash;Milk-Pan.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:310px; height:141px" src="images/img751k.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 12.</span>&mdash;Skimmer.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>In the butter dairy, when
+the centrifugal separator is
+not used, milk is &ldquo;set&rdquo; for
+cream-raising in the milk-pan
+(fig. 11), a shallow
+vessel of white porcelain,
+tinned steel or enamelled iron. The skimming-dish or skimmer
+(fig 12), made of tin, is for collecting the cream from the surface of
+the milk, whence it is transferred to the cream-crock (fig. 13), in
+which vessel the cream remains from one to three days, till it
+is required for churning.
+Many different kinds of
+churns are in use, and
+vary much in size, shape
+and fittings; the one
+illustrated in fig. 14
+is a very good type of
+diaphragm churn. The
+butter-scoop (fig. 15) is
+of wood and is sometimes
+perforated; it is
+used for taking the butter
+out of the churn. The
+butter-worker (fig. 16)
+is employed for consolidating
+newly-churned
+butter, pressing out
+superfluous water and
+mixing in salt. More extended use, however, is now being made
+of the &ldquo;Délaiteuse&rdquo; butter dryer, a centrifugal machine that
+rapidly extracts the moisture from the butter, and renders the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page752" id="page752"></a>752</span>
+butter-worker unnecessary, whilst the butter produced has a
+better grain. Scotch hands (fig. 17), made of boxwood, are used
+for the lifting, moulding and pressing of butter.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:237px; height:241px" src="images/img752a.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 13.</span>&mdash;Cream-Crock.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:470px; height:510px" src="images/img752b.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 14.</span>&mdash;Churn.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="flt" style="float: right; width: 350px;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:299px; height:66px" src="images/img752c.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption1"><span class="sc">Fig. 15.</span>&mdash;Butter-Scoop.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>In the centrifugal cream-separator the new milk is allowed
+to flow into a bowl, which is caused to rotate on its own axis
+several thousand times per
+minute. The heavier portion
+which makes up the watery part
+of the milk flies to the outer circumference
+of the bowl, whilst
+the lighter particles of butter-fat
+are forced to travel in an inner
+zone. By a simple mechanical
+arrangement the separated milk
+is forced out at one tube and
+the cream at another, and they
+are collected in distinct vessels.
+Separators are made of all sizes,
+from small machines dealing
+with 10 or 20 up to 100 gallons
+an hour, and worked by hand (fig. 18), to large machines
+separating 150 to 440 gallons an hour, and worked by horse,
+steam or other power (fig. 19). Separation is found to be
+most effective at temperatures ranging in different machines
+from 80° to 98° F., though as high a temperature as 150° is
+sometimes employed. The most efficient separators remove
+nearly the whole of the butter-fat, the quantity of fat left in
+the separated milk falling in some cases to as low as 0.1.
+When cream is raised by the deep-setting method, from 0.2
+to 0.4% of fat is left in
+the skim-milk; by the
+shallow-setting method
+from 0.3 to 0.5% of
+the fat is left behind.
+As a rule, therefore,
+&ldquo;separated&rdquo; milk is much poorer in fat than ordinary &ldquo;skim&rdquo;
+milk left by the cream-raising method in deep or shallow vessels.</p>
+
+<p>The first continuous working separator was the invention of
+Dr de Laval. The more recent invention by Baron von Bechtolsheim
+of what are known as the Alfa discs, which are placed along
+the centre of the bowl of the separator, has much increased the
+separating capacity of the machines without adding to the
+power required. This has been of great assistance to dairy
+farmers by lessening the cost of the manufacture of butter, and
+thus enabling a large additional number of factories to be
+established in different parts of the world, particularly in Ireland,
+where these disc machines are very extensively used.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:464px; height:365px" src="images/img752d.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 16.</span>&mdash;Butter-Worker.</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:163px; height:232px" src="images/img752e.jpg" alt="" /></td>
+<td class="figcenter"><img style="width:221px; height:425px" src="images/img752f.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 17.</span>&mdash;Scotch
+Hands.</td>
+<td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 18.</span>&mdash;Hand-Separator.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>The pasteurizer&mdash;so named after the French chemist Pasteur&mdash;affords
+a means whereby at the outset the milk is maintained
+at a temperature of 170° to 180° F. for a period of eight or ten
+minutes. The object of this is to destroy
+the tubercle bacillus, if it should happen
+to exist in the milk, whilst incidentally
+the bacilli associated with several other
+diseases communicable through the
+medium of milk would also be killed if
+they were present. Discordant results
+have been recorded by experimenters
+who have attempted to kill tubercle
+bacilli in milk by heating the latter in
+open vessels, thereby permitting the
+formation of a scum or &ldquo;scalded layer&rdquo;
+capable of protecting the tubercle bacilli,
+and enabling them to resist a higher
+temperature than otherwise would be
+fatal to them. At a temperature not much above 150° F.
+milk begins to acquire the cooked flavour which is objectionable
+to many palates, whilst its
+&ldquo;body&rdquo; is so modified as to lessen
+its suitability for creaming purposes.
+Three factors really enter
+into effective pasteurization of milk,
+namely (1) the temperature to which
+the milk is raised, (2) the length of
+time it is kept at that temperature,
+(3) the maintenance of a condition
+of mechanical agitation to prevent
+the formation of &ldquo;scalded layer.&rdquo;
+Within limits, what a higher temperature
+will accomplish if maintained
+for a very short time may
+be effected by a lower temperature
+continued over a longer period.
+The investigation of the problem
+forms the subject of a paper<a name="fa12a" id="fa12a" href="#ft12a"><span class="sp">12</span></a> in
+the 17th <i>Annual Report of the
+Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment
+Station</i>, 1900. The following are
+the results of the experiments:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>1. An exposure of tuberculous milk
+in a tightly closed commercial pasteurizer
+for a period of ten minutes
+destroyed in every case the tubercle bacillus, as determined by the inoculation
+of such heated milk into susceptible animals like guinea-pigs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page753" id="page753"></a>753</span></p>
+
+<p>2. Where milk is exposed under conditions that would enable a
+pellicle or membrane to form on the surface, the tubercle organism
+is able to resist the action of heat at 140° F. (60° C.) for considerably
+longer periods of time.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:394px; height:744px" src="images/img753a.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 19.</span>&mdash;Power Separator.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>3. Efficient pasteurization can be more readily accomplished in a
+closed receptacle such as is most frequently used in the commercial
+treatment of milk, than where the milk is heated in open bottles or
+open vats.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:453px; height:376px" src="images/img753b.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 20.</span>&mdash;Refrigerator and Can.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>4. It is recommended, in order thoroughly to pasteurize milk so
+as to destroy any tubercle bacilli which it may contain, without in any
+way injuring its creaming properties or consistency, to heat the same
+in closed pasteurizers for a period of not less than twenty minutes
+at 140° F.</p>
+
+<p>Under these conditions one may be certain that disease bacteria
+such as the tubercle bacillus will be destroyed without the milk or
+cream being injured in any way. For over a year this new standard
+has been in constant use in the Wisconsin University Creamery,
+and the results, from a purely practical point of view, reported a
+year earlier by Farrington and Russell,<a name="fa13a" id="fa13a" href="#ft13a"><span class="sp">13</span></a> have been abundantly
+confirmed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<table class="flt" style="float: right; width: 400px;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:304px; height:295px" src="images/img753c.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 21.</span>&mdash;Cyclindrical Cooler or
+Refrigerator.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:303px; height:355px" src="images/img753d.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 22.</span>&mdash;Butyrometer.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>Dairy engineers have solved the problem as to how large
+bodies of milk may be pasteurized, the difficulty of raising many
+hundreds or thousands of
+gallons of milk up to the
+required temperature, and
+maintaining it at that heat
+for a period of twenty
+minutes, having been successfully
+dealt with. The
+plant usually employed
+provides for the thorough
+filtration of the milk as it
+comes in from the farms,
+its rapid heating in a
+closed receiver and under
+mechanical agitation up to
+the desired temperature,
+its maintenance thereat
+for the requisite time, and
+finally its sudden reduction
+to the temperature of cold water through the agency of a
+refrigerator, to be next noticed.</p>
+
+<p>Refrigerators are used for reducing the temperature of milk
+to that of cold water, whereby its keeping properties are enhanced.
+The milk flows down the outside of the metal refrigerator
+(fig. 20), which is corrugated in order to provide a larger cooling
+surface, whilst cold water circulates through the interior of the
+refrigerator. The conical vessel into which the milk is represented
+as flowing from the refrigerator in fig. 20 is absurdly called a
+&ldquo;milk-churn,&rdquo; whereas milk-can is a much more appropriate
+name. For very large quantities of milk, such as flow from
+a pasteurizing plant, cylindrical refrigerators (fig. 21), made
+of tinned copper, are available; the cold water circulates inside,
+and the milk, flowing down the outside in a very thin sheet,
+is rapidly cooled from a temperature of 140° F. or higher to 1°
+above the temperature of the water.</p>
+
+<p>The fat test for milk was originally devised by Dr S. M.
+Babcock, of the Wisconsin, U.S.A., experiment station. It
+combines the principle of centrifugal force with simple chemical
+action. Besides the machine itself and its graduated glass
+vessels, the only requirements
+are sulphuric acid
+of standard strength and
+warm water. The
+machines&mdash;often termed
+butyrometers&mdash;are commonly
+made to hold from
+two up to two dozen
+testers. After the tubes
+or testers have been
+charged, they are put in
+the apparatus, which is
+rapidly rotated as shown
+(fig. 22); in a few minutes
+the test is complete, and
+with properly graduated
+vessels the percentage of
+fat can be read off at a
+glance. The butyrometer
+is extremely useful, alike
+for measuring periodically
+the fat-producing capacity of individual cows in a herd,
+for rapidly ascertaining the percentage of fat in milk delivered
+to factories and paying for such milk on the basis of quality,
+and for determining the richness in fat of milk supplied for the
+urban milk trade. Any intelligent person can soon learn to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page754" id="page754"></a>754</span>
+work the apparatus, but its efficiency is of course dependent
+upon the accuracy of the measuring vessels. To ensure this the
+board of agriculture have made arrangements with the National
+Physical Laboratory, Old Deer Park, Richmond, Surrey, to
+verify at a small fee the pipettes, measuring-glasses, and test-bottles
+used in connexion with the centrifugal butyrometer,
+which in recent years has been improved by Dr N. Gerber of
+Zürich.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc" style="clear: both;">Dairy Factories</p>
+
+<p>In connexion with co-operative cheese-making the merit of
+having founded the first &ldquo;cheesery&rdquo; or cheese factory is generally
+credited to Jesse Williams, who lived near Rome, Oneida county,
+N.Y. The system, therefore, was of American origin. Williams
+was a skilled cheese-maker, and the produce of his dairy sold
+so freely, at prices over the average, that he increased his output
+of cheese by adding to his own supply of milk other quantities
+which he obtained from his neighbours. His example was
+so widely followed that by the year 1866 there had been established
+close upon 500 cheese factories in New York state alone.
+In 1870 two co-operative cheeseries were at work in England,
+one in the town of Derby and one at Longford in the same
+county. There are now thousands of cheeseries in the United
+States and Canada, and also many &ldquo;creameries,&rdquo; or butter
+factories, for the making of high-class butter.</p>
+
+<p>The first creamery was that of Alanson Slaughter, and it was
+built near Wallkill, Orange county, N.Y., in 1861, or ten years
+later than the first cheese factory; it dealt daily with the milk
+of 375 cows. Cheeseries and creameries would almost certainly
+have become more numerous than they are in England but for
+the rapidly expanding urban trade in country milk. The development
+of each, indeed, has been contemporaneous since 1871,
+and they are found to work well in conjunction one with the other&mdash;that
+is to say, a factory is useful for converting surplus milk
+into cheese or butter when the milk trade is overstocked, whilst
+the trade affords a convenient avenue for the sale of milk whenever
+this may happen to be preferable to the making of cheese or
+butter. Extensive dealers in milk arrange for its conversion into
+cheese or butter, as the case may be, at such times as the milk
+market needs relief, and in this way a cheesery serves as a sort of
+economic safety-valve to the milk trade. The same cannot
+always be said of creameries, because the machine-skimmed
+milk of some of these establishments has been far too much
+used to the prejudice of the legitimate milk trade in urban
+districts. Be this as it may, the operations of cheeseries and
+creameries in conjunction with the milk trade have led to the
+diminution of home dairying. A rapidly increasing population
+has maintained, and probably increased, its consumption of milk,
+which has obviously diminished the farmhouse production of
+cheese, and also of butter. The foreign competitor has been less
+successful with cheese than with butter, for he is unable to
+produce an article qualified to compete with the best that is
+made in Great Britain. In the case of butter, on the other hand,
+the imported article, though not ever surpassing the best home-made,
+is on the average much better, especially as regards
+uniformity of quality. Colonial and foreign producers, however,
+send into the British markets as a rule only the best of their
+butter, as they are aware that their inferior grades would but
+injure the reputation their products have acquired.</p>
+
+<p>There are no official statistics concerning dairy factories in
+Great Britain, and such figures relating to Ireland were issued
+for the first time in 1901. The number of dairy factories in
+Ireland in 1900 was returned at 506, comprising 333 in Munster,
+92 in Ulster, 52 in Leinster and 29 in Connaught. Of the total
+number of factories, 495 received milk only, 9 milk and cream
+and 2 cream only. As to ownership, 219 were joint-stock concerns,
+190 were maintained by co-operative farmers and 97 were
+proprietary. In the year ended 30th September 1900 these
+factories used up nearly 121 million gallons of milk, namely, 94
+in Munster, 14 in Ulster, 7 in Leinster and 6 in Connaught.
+The number of centrifugal cream-separators in the factories was
+985, of which 889 were worked by steam, 79 by water, 9 by
+horse-power and 8 by hand-power. The number of hands
+permanently employed was 3653, made up of 976 in Munster,
+279 in Leinster, 278 in Ulster and 120 in Connaught. The year&rsquo;s
+output was returned at 401,490 cwt. of butter, 439 cwt. of cheese
+(made from whole milk) and 46,253 gallons of cream. In most
+cases the skim-milk is returned to the farmers. A return of the
+number of separators used in private establishments gave a total
+of 899, comprising 693 in Munster, 157 in Leinster, 39 in Ulster
+and 10 in Connaught. In factories and private establishments
+together as many as 1884 separators were thus accounted for.
+Much of the factory butter would be sent into the markets of
+Great Britain, though some would no doubt be retained for local
+consumption. A great improvement in the quality of Irish
+butter has recently been noticeable in the exhibits entered at the
+London dairy show.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Adulteration of Dairy Produce<a name="fa14a" id="fa14a" href="#ft14a"><span class="sp">14</span></a></p>
+
+<p>The Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1899, which came into operation
+on the 1st of January 1900, contains several sections relating
+to the trade in dairy produce in the United Kingdom. Section 1
+imposes penalties in the case of the importation of produce insufficiently
+marked, such as (<i>a</i>) margarine or margarine-cheese,
+except in passages conspicuously marked &ldquo;Margarine&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;Margarine-cheese&rdquo;; (<i>b</i>) adulterated or impoverished butter
+(other than margarine) or adulterated or impoverished milk or
+cream, except in packages or cans conspicuously marked with
+a name or description indicating that the butter or milk or
+cream has been so treated; (<i>c</i>) condensed separated or skimmed
+milk, except in tins or other receptacles which bear a label
+whereon the words &ldquo;machine-skimmed milk&rdquo; or &ldquo;skimmed
+milk&rdquo; are printed in large and legible type. For the purposes
+of this section an article of food is deemed to be adulterated or
+impoverished if it has been mixed with any other substance, or
+if any part of it has been abstracted, so as in either case to affect
+injuriously its quality, substance, or nature; provided that an
+article of food shall not be deemed to be adulterated by reason
+only of the addition of any preservative or colouring matter of
+such a nature and in such quantity as not to render the article
+injurious to health. Section 7 provides that every occupier of
+a manufactory of margarine or margarine-cheese, and every
+wholesale dealer in such substances, shall keep a register showing
+the quantity and destination of each consignment of such substances
+sent out from his manufactory or place of business, and
+this register shall be open to the inspection of any officer of the
+board of agriculture. Any such officer shall have power to enter
+at all reasonable times any such manufactory, and to inspect any
+process of manufacture therein, and to take samples for analysis.
+Section 8 is of much practical importance, as it limits the quantity
+of butter-fat which may be contained in margarine; it states
+that it shall be unlawful to manufacture, sell, expose for sale
+or import any margarine the fat of which contains more than
+10% of butter-fat, and every person who manufactures, sells,
+exposes for sale or imports any margarine which contains more
+than that percentage shall be guilty of an offence under the
+Margarine Act 1887. For the purposes of the act <i>margarine-cheese</i>
+is defined as &ldquo;any substance, whether compound or
+otherwise, which is prepared in imitation of cheese, and which
+contains fat not derived from milk&rdquo;; whilst <i>cheese</i> is defined as
+&ldquo;the substance usually known as cheese, containing no fat
+derived otherwise than from milk.&rdquo; The so-called &ldquo;filled&rdquo;
+cheese of American origin, in which the butter-fat of the milk is
+partially or wholly replaced by some other fat, would come under
+the head of &ldquo;margarine-cheese.&rdquo; In making such cheese a cheap
+form of fat, usually of animal origin, but sometimes vegetable,
+is added to and incorporated with the skim-milk, and thus takes
+the place previously occupied by the genuine butter-fat. The
+act is regarded by some as defective in that it does not prohibit
+the artificial colouring of margarine to imitate butter.</p>
+
+<p>In connexion with this act a departmental committee was
+appointed in 1900 &ldquo;to inquire and report as to what regulations,
+if any, may with advantage be made by the board of agriculture
+under section 4 of the Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1899, for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page755" id="page755"></a>755</span>
+determining what deficiency in any of the normal constituents
+of genuine milk or cream, or what addition of extraneous matter
+or proportion of water, in any sample of milk (including condensed
+milk) or cream, shall for the purposes of the Sale of Food
+and Drugs Acts 1875 to 1899, raise a presumption, until the
+contrary is proved, that the milk or cream is not genuine.&rdquo;
+Much evidence of the highest interest to dairy-farmers was taken,
+and subsequently published as a Blue-Book (Cd. 484). The
+report of the committee (Cd. 491) included the following &ldquo;recommendations,&rdquo;
+which were signed by all the members excepting
+one:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<div class="list">
+ <p>I. That regulations under section 4 of the Food and Drugs Act
+ 1899 be made by the board of agriculture with respect
+ to milk (including condensed milk) and cream.</p>
+ <p>II.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="list1">
+ <p>(<i>a</i>) That in the case of any milk (other than skimmed, separated
+ or condensed milk) the total milk-solids in which on
+ being dried at 100° C. do not amount to 12% a presumption
+ shall be raised, until the contrary is proved, that the
+ milk is deficient in the normal constituents of genuine milk.</p>
+ <p>(<i>b</i>) That any milk (other than skimmed, separated or condensed
+ milk) the total milk-solids in which are less than
+ 12%, and in which the amount of milk-fat is less than
+ 3.25%, shall be deemed to be deficient in milk-fat as to
+ raise a presumption, until the contrary is proved, that it
+ has been mixed with separated milk or water, or that some
+ portion of its normal content of milk-fat has been removed.
+ In calculating the percentage amount of deficiency of fat
+ the analyst shall have regard to the above-named limit
+ of 3.25% of milk-fat.</p>
+ <p>(<i>c</i>) That any milk (other than skimmed, separated or condensed
+ milk) the total milk-solids in which are less than
+ 12%, and in which the amount of non-fatty milk-solids
+ is less than 8.5%, shall be deemed to be so deficient in
+ normal constituents as to raise a presumption, until the
+ contrary is proved, that it has been mixed with water.
+ In calculating the percentage amount of admixed water
+ the analyst shall have regard to the above-named limit
+ of 8.5% of non-fatty milk-solids, and shall further take
+ into account the extent to which the milk-fat may exceed
+ 3.25%.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="list">
+ <p>III. That the artificial thickening of cream by any addition of
+ gelatin or other substance shall raise a presumption that
+ the cream is not genuine.</p>
+ <p>IV. That any skimmed or separated milk in which the total milk-solids
+ are less than 9% shall be deemed to be so deficient
+ in normal constituents as to raise a presumption, until
+ the contrary is proved, that it has been mixed with water.</p>
+ <p>V. That any condensed milk (other than that labelled &ldquo;machine-skimmed
+ milk&rdquo; or &ldquo;skimmed milk,&rdquo; in conformity with
+ section 11 of the Food and Drugs Act 1899) in which
+ either the amount of milk-fat is less than 10%, or the
+ amount of non-fatty milk-solids is less than 25%, shall
+ be deemed to be so deficient in some of the normal constituents
+ of milk as to raise a presumption, until the contrary
+ is proved, that it is not genuine.</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The committee further submitted the following expressions of
+opinion on points raised before them in evidence:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<div class="list">
+ <p>(<i>a</i>) That it is desirable to call the attention of those engaged
+ in the administration of the Food and Drugs Acts to the
+ necessity of adopting effective measures to prevent any
+ addition of water, separated or condensed milk, or other
+ extraneous matter, for the purpose of reducing the quality
+ of genuine milk to any limits fixed by regulation of the
+ board of agriculture.</p>
+ <p>(<i>b</i>) That it is desirable that steps should be taken with the view
+ of identifying or &ldquo;ear-marking&rdquo; separated milk by the
+ addition of some suitable and innocuous substance, and by
+ the adoption of procedure similar to that provided by
+ section 7 of the Food and Drugs Act 1899, in regard to
+ margarine.</p>
+ <p>(<i>c</i>) That it is desirable that, so far as may be found practicable,
+ the procedure adopted in collecting, forwarding, and retaining
+ pending examination, samples of milk (including condensed
+ milk) and cream under the Food and Drugs Acts
+ should be uniform.</p>
+ <p>(<i>d</i>) That it is desirable that, so far as may be found practicable,
+ the methods of analysis used in the examination of samples
+ of milk (including condensed milk) or cream taken under
+ the Food and Drugs Acts should be uniform.</p>
+ <p>(<i>e</i>) That it is desirable in the case of condensed milk (other than
+ that labelled &ldquo;machine-skimmed milk&rdquo; or &ldquo;skimmed milk,&rdquo;
+ in conformity with section 11 of the Food and Drugs Act
+ 1899) that the label should state the amount of dilution
+ required to make the proportion of milk-fat equal to that
+ found in uncondensed milk containing not less than 3.25%
+ of milk-fat.</p>
+<p>(<i>f</i>) That it is desirable in the case of condensed whole milk to
+limit, and in the case of condensed machine-skimmed milk
+to exclude, the addition of sugar.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>g</i>) That the official standardizing of the measuring vessels commercially
+used in the testing of milk is desirable.</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the minority report, signed by Mr Geo. Barham, the most
+important clauses are the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>(<i>a</i>) That in the case of any milk (other than skimmed, separated
+or condensed milk) the total milk-solids in which are less than
+11.75%, and in which, during the months of July to February
+inclusive, the amount of milk-fat is less than 3%, and in the case
+of any milk which during the months of March to June inclusive
+shall fall below the above-named limit for total solids, and at the
+same time shall contain less than 2.75% of fat, it shall be deemed
+that such milk is so deficient in its normal constituent of fat as to
+raise a presumption, for the purposes of the Sale of Food and Drugs
+Acts 1875 to 1899, until the contrary is proved, that the milk is not
+genuine.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) That any milk (other than skimmed, separated or condensed
+milk) the total milk-solids in which are less than 11.75%, and in
+which the amount of non-fatty solids is less than 8.5%, shall be
+deemed to be so deficient in its normal constituents as to raise a
+presumption, for the purposes of the Sale of Food and Drugs Acts
+1875 to 1899, until the contrary is proved, that the milk is not
+genuine. In calculating the amount of the deficiency the analyst
+shall take into account the extent to which the milk-fat exceeds the
+limits above named.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c</i>) That any skimmed or separated milk in which the total milk-solids
+are less than 8.75% shall be deemed to be so deficient in its
+normal constituents as to raise a presumption, for the purpose of
+the Sale of Food and Drugs Acts 1875 to 1899, until the contrary
+is proved, that the milk is not genuine.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Much controversy arose out of the publication of these reports,
+the opinion most freely expressed being that the standard recommended
+in the majority report was too high. The difficulty of
+the problem is illustrated by, for example, the diverse legal
+standards for milk that prevail in the United States, where the
+prescribed percentage of fat in fresh cows&rsquo; milk ranges from 2.5
+in Rhode Island to 3.5 in Georgia and Minnesota, and 3.7 (in the
+winter months) in Massachusetts, and the prescribed total solids
+range from 12 in several states (11.5 in Ohio during May and
+June) up to 13 in others. Standards are recognized in twenty-one
+of the states, but the remaining states have no laws
+prescribing standards for dairy products. That the public discussion
+of the reports of the committee was effective is shown by
+the following regulations which appeared in the <i>London Gazette</i>
+on the 6th of August 1901, and fixed the limit of fat at 3%:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The board of agriculture, in exercise of the powers conferred
+on them by section 4 of the Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1899, do
+hereby make the following regulations:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>1. Where a sample of milk (not being milk sold as skimmed,
+or separated or condensed milk) contains less than 3% of milk-fat,
+it shall be presumed for the purposes of the Sale of Food and Drugs
+Acts 1875 to 1899, until the contrary is proved, that the milk is not
+genuine, by reason of the abstraction therefrom of milk-fat, or the
+addition thereto of water.</p>
+
+<p>2. Where a sample of milk (not being milk sold as skimmed, or
+separated or condensed milk) contains less than 8.5% of milk-solids
+other than milk-fat, it shall be presumed for the purposes of the Sale
+of Food and Drugs Acts 1875 to 1899, until the contrary is proved,
+that the milk is not genuine, by reason of the abstraction therefrom
+of milk-solids other than milk-fat, or the addition thereto of
+water.</p>
+
+<p>3. Where a sample of skimmed or separated milk (not being
+condensed milk) contains less than 9% of milk-solids, it shall be
+presumed for the purposes of the Sale of Food and Drugs Acts 1875
+to 1899, until the contrary is proved, that the milk is not genuine,
+by reason of the abstraction therefrom of milk-solids other than
+milk-fat, or the addition thereto of water.</p>
+
+<p>4. These regulations shall extend to Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>5. These regulations shall come into operation on the 1st of
+September 1901.</p>
+
+<p>6. These regulations may be cited as the Sale of Milk Regulations
+1901.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In July 1901 another departmental committee was appointed
+by the board of agriculture to inquire and report as to what
+regulations, if any, might with advantage be made under section
+4 of the Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1899, for determining what
+deficiency in any of the normal constituents of butter, or what
+addition of extraneous matter, or proportion of water in any
+sample of butter should, for the purpose of the Sale of Food and
+Drugs Acts, raise a presumption, until the contrary is proved,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page756" id="page756"></a>756</span>
+that the butter is not genuine. As bearing upon this point
+reference may be made to a report of the dairy division of the
+United States department of agriculture on experimental exports
+of butter, in the appendix to which are recorded the results of the
+analyses of many samples of butter of varied origin. First, as to
+American butters, 19 samples were analysed in Wisconsin, 17 in
+Iowa, 5 in Minnesota and 2 in Vermont, at the respective experiment
+stations of the states named. The amount of moisture
+throughout was low, and the quantity of fat correspondingly
+high. In no case was there more than 15% of water, and only 4
+samples contained more than 14%. On the other hand, 11
+samples had less than 10%, the lowest being a pasteurized butter
+from Ames, Iowa, with only 6.72% of water. The average
+amount of water in the total 43 samples was 11.24%. The fat
+varies almost inversely as the water, small quantities of curd and
+ash having to be allowed for. The largest quantity of fat was
+91.23% in the sample containing only 6.72% of water. The
+lowest proportion of fat was 80.18%, whilst the average of all
+the samples shows 85.9%, which is regarded as a good market
+standard. The curd varied from 0.55 to 1.7%, with an average
+of 0.98. This small amount indicates superior keeping qualities.
+Theoretically there should be no curd present, but this degree of
+perfection is never attained in practice. It was desired to have
+the butter contain about 2½% of salt, but the quantity of ash
+in the 43 samples ranged from 0.83 to 4.79%, the average being
+1.88. Analyses made at Washington of butters other than
+American showed a general average of 13.22% of water over
+28 samples representing 14 countries. The lowest were 10.25%
+in a Canadian butter and 10.38 in an Australian sample. The
+highest was 19.1% in an Irish butter, which also contained the
+remarkably large quantity of 8.28% of salt. Three samples of
+Danish butter contained 12.65, 14.27 and 15.14% respectively
+of water. French and Italian unsalted butter included, the
+former 15.46 and the latter 14.41% of water, and yet appeared
+to be unusually dry. In 7 samples of Irish butters the percentages
+of water ranged from 11.48 to 19.1. Of the 28 foreign
+butters 15 were found to contain preservatives. All 5 samples
+from Australia, the 2 from France, the single ones from Italy,
+New Zealand, Argentina, and England, and 4 out of the 7 from
+Ireland, contained boric acid.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">The Milk Trade</p>
+
+<p>The term &ldquo;milk trade&rdquo; has come to signify the great traffic in
+country milk for the supply of dwellers in urban districts. Prior
+to 1860 this traffic was comparatively small or in its infancy.
+Thirty years earlier it could not have been brought into existence,
+for it is an outcome of the great network of railways which was
+spread over the face of the country in the latter half of the 19th
+century. It affords an instructive illustration of the process of
+commercial evolution which has been fostered by the vast
+increase of urban population within the period indicated. It
+is a tribute to the spirit of sanitary reform which&mdash;as an example
+in one special direction&mdash;has brought about the disestablishment
+of urban cow-sheds and the consequent demand for milk produced
+in the shires. London, in fact, is now being regularly
+supplied with fresh milk from places anywhere within 150 m.,
+and the milk traffic on the railways, not only to London but to
+other great centres, is an important item. A factor in the
+development of the milk trade must no doubt be sought in the
+outbreak of cattle plague in 1865, for it was then that the dairymen
+of the metropolis were compelled to seek milk all over
+England, and the capillary refrigerator being invented soon
+after, the production of milk has remained ever since in the hands
+of dairymen living mainly at a distance from the towns supplied.</p>
+
+<p>This great change in country dairying, involving the continuous
+export of enormous quantities of milk from the farms, has been
+accompanied by subsidiary changes in the management of dairy-farms,
+and has necessitated the extensive purchase of feeding-stuffs
+for the production of milk, especially in winter-time. It
+is probable that, in this way, a gradual improvement of the soil
+on such farms has been effected, and the corn-growing soils of
+distant countries are adding to the store of fertility of soils in the
+British Isles. Country roads, exposed to the wear and
+tear of a comparatively new traffic, are lively at morn and
+eve with the rattle of vehicles conveying fresh milk from the
+farms to the railway stations. Most of these changes were
+brought about within the limits of the last third of the 19th
+century.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of London the daily supply of a perishable article
+such as milk, which must be delivered to the consumer within a
+few hours of its production, to a population of five millions, is an
+undertaking of very great magnitude, especially when it is considered
+that only a comparatively minute proportion of the
+supply is produced in the metropolitan area itself. To meet the
+demand of the London consumer some 5000 dairies proper exist,
+as well as a large number of businesses where milk is sold in
+conjunction with other commodities. It has been computed
+that some 12,000 traders are engaged in the business of milk-selling
+in the metropolis, and the number of persons employed in
+its distribution, &amp;c., cannot be fewer than 25,000. The amount
+of capital involved is very great, and it may be mentioned that
+the paid-up capital of six of the principal distributing and retail
+dairy companies amounts to upwards of one million sterling.
+The most significant feature in connexion with the milk-supply of
+the metropolis at the beginning of the 20th century is the gradual
+extinction of the town &ldquo;cowkeeper&rdquo;&mdash;the retailer who produces
+the milk he sells. The facilities afforded by the railway companies,
+the favourable rates which have been secured for the
+transport of milk, and the more enlightened methods of its treatment
+after production, have made it possible for milk produced
+under more favourable conditions to be brought from considerable
+distances and delivered to the retailer at a price lower than
+that at which it has been possible to produce it in the metropolis
+itself. As a result, the number of milk cows in the county of
+London diminished from 10,000 in 1889 to 5144 in 1900, the
+latter, on an estimated production of 700 gallons per cow&mdash;the
+average production of stall-fed town cows&mdash;representing a yearly
+milk yield of 3,600,000 gallons. How small a proportion this is of
+the total supply will be gathered from the fact that the annual
+quantity of milk delivered in London on the Great Western line
+amounts to some 11,000,000 gallons, whilst the London &amp; North-Western
+railway delivers 9,000,000, and the Midland railway at
+St Pancras 5,000,000, and at others of its London stations
+about 1,000,000, making 6,000,000 in all. The London &amp; South-Western
+railway brings upwards of 8,000,000 gallons to London,
+a quantity of 7,500,000 gallons is carried by the Great Northern
+railway, and the Great Eastern railway is responsible for
+7,000,000. The London, Brighton &amp; South Coast railway delivers
+1,000,000 gallons, and the South-Eastern &amp; Chatham and
+the London &amp; Tilbury railways carry approximately 1,000,000
+gallons between them. A large quantity of milk is also carried
+in by local lines from farms in the vicinity of London and
+delivered at the local stations, and a quantity is also brought
+by the Great Central railway. In addition to this, milk is taken
+into London by carts from farms in the neighbourhood of the
+metropolis. A computation of the total milk-supply of the
+metropolis reveals a quantity approximating to 60,000,000
+gallons per annum, or rather more than a million gallons per
+week, which, taking 500 gallons as the average yearly production
+of the cows contributing to this supply, represents the yield of at
+least 120,000 cows. The growth of the supply of country milk to
+London may be judged from the figures given by Mr George
+Barham, chairman of the Express Dairy Co. Ltd., in an article on
+&ldquo;The Milk Trade&rdquo; contributed to Professor Sheldon&rsquo;s work on
+<i>The Farm and Dairy</i>. The quantities carried by the respective
+railways in 1889 are therein stated in gallons as:&mdash;Great Western,
+9,000,000; London &amp; North-Western, 7,000,000; Midland,
+7,000,000; London &amp; South-Western, 6,000,000; Great
+Northern, 3,000,000; Great Eastern, 3,000,000; the southern
+lines, 2,000,000. The increase, therefore, on these lines amounted
+to no less than 13,500,000 gallons per annum, or 36%. The
+diminished production in the metropolis itself amounted approximately
+only to 3,000,000 gallons, and it follows, therefore, that
+the consumption largely increased.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page757" id="page757"></a>757</span></p>
+
+<p>Previously to 1864 it was only possible to bring milk into
+London from short distances, but the introduction of the refrigerator
+has enabled milk to be brought from places as far
+removed from the metropolis as North Staffordshire, and it has
+even been received from Scotland. Practically the whole of
+the milk supplied to the metropolis is produced in England.
+Attempts have been made to introduce foreign milk, and in
+1898 a company was formed to promote the sale of fresh milk
+from Normandy, but the enterprise did not succeed. The trade
+subsequently showed signs of reviving, owing probably to the
+increased cost of the home produced article, and during the
+winter season of 1900-1901 the largest quantity received into
+the kingdom in one week amounted to 10,000 gallons. Of recent
+years a large demand has sprung up for sterilized milk in bottles,
+and a considerable trade is also done in humanized milk, which
+is a milk preparation approximating in its chemical composition
+to human milk.</p>
+
+<p>Estimating the average yield of milk of each country cow at
+500 gallons per annum, and assuming an average of 28 cows to
+each farm, as many as 4300 farmers are engaged in supplying
+London with milk; allotting ten cows to each milker, it needs
+12 battalions of 1000 men each for this work alone. Some 3500
+horses are required to convey the milk from the farms to the
+country railway stations. The chief sources of supply are in the
+counties of Derby, Stafford, Leicester, Northampton, Notts,
+Warwick, Bucks, Oxford, Gloucester, Berks, Wilts, Hants,
+Dorset, Essex, and Cambridge. It is not entirely owing to the
+railways that London&rsquo;s enormous supply of milk has been
+rendered possible, for the milk must still have been produced in
+the immediate neighbourhood of the metropolis had not the
+method of reducing the temperature of the product by means of
+the refrigerator been devised. There are probably 5700 horses
+engaged in the delivery of milk in London, and more people are
+employed in this work than in milking the cows. One of the
+great difficulties the London dairyman has to contend with, and
+a cause of frequent anxiety to him, is associated with the rise
+and fall of the thermometer, for a movement to the extent of ten
+degrees one way or the other may diminish or increase the supply
+in an inverse ratio to the demand. Thus, at periods of extreme
+cold, the cows shrink in their yield of milk, while from the same
+cause the Londoner is demanding more, in an extra cup of coffee,
+&amp;c. Again, at periods of extreme heat, which has the same effect
+on the cow&rsquo;s production as extreme cold, the customer also
+demands an increased quantity of milk. Ten degrees fall of
+temperature in the summer will result in a lessened demand and
+an enlarged supply&mdash;to such an extent, indeed, that a single
+firm has been known to have had returned by its carriers some
+600 gallons in one day. In such cases the cream separator is
+capable of rendering invaluable assistance. To make cheese in
+London in large quantities and at uncertain intervals has been
+found to be impracticable, while to set for cream a great bulk of
+milk is almost equally so. But now a considerable portion of
+what would otherwise be lost is saved by passing the milk
+through separators, and churning the cream into butter.</p>
+
+<p>Previously to the enormous development of the urban trade in
+country milk, dairy farms were in the main self-sustaining in the
+matter of manures and feeding-stuffs, and the cropping of arable
+land was governed by routine. To-day, on the contrary, many
+dairy farms are run at high pressure by the help of purchased
+materials,&mdash;corn, cake, and manure,&mdash;and the land is cropped
+regardless of routine and independent of courses. Such crops,
+moreover, are grown&mdash;white straw crops, green crops, root crops&mdash;as
+are deemed likely to be most needed at the time when they
+are ready. Green crops,&mdash;&ldquo;soiling&rdquo; crops, as they are termed
+in North America,&mdash;consisting largely of vetches or tares (held
+up by stalks of oat plants grown amongst them), cabbages, and
+in some districts green maize, are used to supplement the failing
+grass-lands at the fall of the year, and root crops, especially
+mangel, are advantageously grown for the same purpose. For
+winter feeding the farm is made to yield what it will in the shape
+of meadow and clover hay, and of course root crops of the several
+kinds. This provision is supplemented by the purchase of, for
+example, brewers&rsquo; grains as a bulky food, and of oilcake and corn
+of many sorts as concentrated food.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XI.</span>&mdash;<i>Estimated Annual Production of Milk, Butter and Cheese in the United Kingdom for the Ten Years ended
+31st December 1899.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year<br />ended<br />December<br />31.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Cows and Heifers<br />in Milk or in<br />Calf on 4th June.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Cows<br />per 1000<br />of<br />Popu-<br />lation.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Cows and<br />Heifers giving<br />Milk all the<br />year round;<br />say 75% of<br />Total.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Influence of<br />Season.<br />Percentage<br />above or<br />below the<br />Average of<br />previous<br />10 Years.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Estimated Total<br />Quantity of<br />Milk produced<br />in the 52<br />Weeks, by 75%<br />of the Total<br />Herd, at 49<br />cwt. or 531<br />gallons per<br />Cow.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Estimated Total<br />Quantity of<br />Butter produced<br />in the 52<br />Weeks, taking 32%<br />of the Total<br />Milk to yield<br />80 &#8468; of Butter<br />per Ton of<br />Milk.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Estimated Total<br />Quantity of<br />Cheese produced<br />in the 52<br />Weeks, taking 20%<br />of the Total<br />Milk to yield<br />220 &#8468; of Cheese<br />per Ton of<br />Milk.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td> <td class="tcc rb">No.</td> <td class="tcc rb">%.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1890</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,956,220</td> <td class="tcc rb">105.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,967,165</td> <td class="tcc rb">+3.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,487,640</td> <td class="tcc rb">85,572</td> <td class="tcc rb">147,078</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,117,707</td> <td class="tcc rb">108.9</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,088,281</td> <td class="tcc rb">Average.</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,566,288</td> <td class="tcc rb">86,472</td> <td class="tcc rb">148,624</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1892</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,120,451</td> <td class="tcc rb">108.1</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,090,339</td> <td class="tcc rb">&minus;5.6</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,147,337</td> <td class="tcc rb">81,684</td> <td class="tcc rb">140,394</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1893</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,014,055</td> <td class="tcc rb">104.4</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,010,542</td> <td class="tcc rb">&minus;9.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">6,712,004</td> <td class="tcc rb">76,709</td> <td class="tcc rb">131,843</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1894</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,925,486</td> <td class="tcc rb">101.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,944,115</td> <td class="tcc rb">+6.3</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,667,505</td> <td class="tcc rb">87,628</td> <td class="tcc rb">150,611</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1895</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,937,590</td> <td class="tcc rb">100.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,953,193</td> <td class="tcc rb">&minus;3.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">6,982,087</td> <td class="tcc rb">79,652</td> <td class="tcc rb">137,148</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1896</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,958,762</td> <td class="tcc rb">100.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,969,387</td> <td class="tcc rb">&minus;4.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">6,983,999</td> <td class="tcc rb">79,817</td> <td class="tcc rb">130,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1897</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,984,167</td> <td class="tcc rb">99.7</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,988,126</td> <td class="tcc rb">+3.1</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,547,856</td> <td class="tcc rb">86,261</td> <td class="tcc rb">148,260</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1898</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,035,501</td> <td class="tcc rb">100.0</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,025,526</td> <td class="tcc rb">+3.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,645,105</td> <td class="tcc rb">87,372</td> <td class="tcc rb">150,171</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,133,249</td> <td class="tcc rb">101.9</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,099,937</td> <td class="tcc rb">&minus;3.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">7,329,027</td> <td class="tcc rb">83,760</td> <td class="tcc rb">130,020</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">10 <i>Years</i>&rsquo;<br /><i>Average</i></td> <td class="tccm allb">4,018,318</td> <td class="tccm allb">103.0</td> <td class="tccm allb">3,013,660</td> <td class="tccm allb">&minus;0.7</td> <td class="tccm allb">7,906,874</td> <td class="tccm allb">83,992</td> <td class="tccm allb">141,412</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">British Output, Imports and Exports of Dairy
+Produce</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the quantity of imported butter and cheese consumed
+in the United Kingdom from year to year can be arrived at
+with a tolerable degree of accuracy, it is more difficult to form
+an estimate of the amounts of these articles annually produced
+at home. Various attempts have, however, from time to time
+been made by competent authorities to arrive approximately
+at the annual output of milk, butter and cheese in the United
+Kingdom, and the results are given by Messrs W. Weddel &amp; Co.
+in their annual <i>Dairy Produce Review</i>. Table XI. shows the
+estimates for each of the ten years 1890 to 1899, the numbers
+in the second column of &ldquo;cows and heifers in milk or in calf&rdquo;
+being identical with those officially recorded in the agricultural
+returns. In thus estimating the quantity of milk, butter and
+cheese produced within the United Kingdom, the &ldquo;average
+milking life&rdquo; of a cow is taken to be four years, from which it
+follows that on the average one-fourth of the total herd has to
+be renewed every year by heifers with their first calf. This
+leaves 75% of the total herd giving milk throughout the year.
+Each cow of this 75% is estimated as yielding 49 cwt., or
+531 gallons of milk annually. It is assumed that 15% of the
+total milk yield is used for the calf, 32% utilized for butter-making,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page758" id="page758"></a>758</span>
+20% for cheese-making, and the remaining 33%
+consumed in the household as fresh milk. A ton of milk is
+estimated to produce 80 &#8468; of butter or 220 &#8468; of cheese. A
+gallon of milk weighs 10.33 &#8468; (10<span class="spp">1</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">3</span> &#8468;). The probable effects
+of each season upon the production have been taken into consideration
+in making these estimates, and it will be noticed that
+owing to the terrible drought of 1893 a reduction of 9% is
+made from the average. Accepting these estimates with due
+reservation,<a name="fa15a" id="fa15a" href="#ft15a"><span class="sp">15</span></a> it is seen that the annual production of milk varied
+in the decade to the extent of nearly a million tons, the exact
+difference between the maximum of 7,667,505 tons in 1894
+and the minimum of 6,712,004 tons in 1893 being 955,501 tons.
+The decennial averages are 7,906,874 tons of milk, 83,992 tons
+of butter, and 141,412 tons of cheese.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Table XII. furnishes an estimate of the total consumption of
+butter in the United Kingdom in each of the years 1891 to 1900.
+Whilst the estimated home production did not vary greatly from
+year to year, the imports from colonial and foreign sources underwent
+almost continuous increase. The ten years&rsquo; average indicates
+37.6% home-made, 7.3% imported colonial, and 55.1% imported
+foreign butter. But whereas at the beginning of the decade the
+proportions were 45.4% home-made, 1.5% colonial, and 53.2%
+foreign, at the end of the percentages were 32.8, 14.7 and 52.5
+respectively. It thus appears that whilst the United Kingdom was
+able in 1891 to furnish nearly half of its requirements (45.4%), by
+1900 it was unable to supply more than one-third (32.8%).</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XII.</span>&mdash;<i>Estimated Home Production and Imports of Butter
+into the United Kingdom for the Ten Years ended 30th June
+1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year ended<br />30th June.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Home<br />Production,<br /><i>estimated</i>.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Imported<br />Colonial.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Imported<br />Foreign.</td>
+ <td class="tccm allb">Total.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcc rb">84,961</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;2,883</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;99,598</td> <td class="tcc rb">187,442</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1892</td> <td class="tcc rb">86,022</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;6,323</td> <td class="tcc rb">101,796</td> <td class="tcc rb">194,141</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1893</td> <td class="tcc rb">84,078</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;9,408</td> <td class="tcc rb">105,712</td> <td class="tcc rb">199,198</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1894</td> <td class="tcc rb">79,196</td> <td class="tcc rb">15,550</td> <td class="tcc rb">107,534</td> <td class="tcc rb">202,280</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1895</td> <td class="tcc rb">82,168</td> <td class="tcc rb">17,807</td> <td class="tcc rb">116,730</td> <td class="tcc rb">216,705</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1896</td> <td class="tcc rb">83,640</td> <td class="tcc rb">12,949</td> <td class="tcc rb">133,249</td> <td class="tcc rb">229,838</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1897</td> <td class="tcc rb">79,734</td> <td class="tcc rb">18,111</td> <td class="tcc rb">138,800</td> <td class="tcc rb">236,645</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1898</td> <td class="tcc rb">83,039</td> <td class="tcc rb">17,732</td> <td class="tcc rb">141,426</td> <td class="tcc rb">242,197</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">87,326</td> <td class="tcc rb">22,443</td> <td class="tcc rb">142,193</td> <td class="tcc rb">251,962 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb">83,760</td> <td class="tcc rb">37,534</td> <td class="tcc rb">133,957</td> <td class="tcc rb">255,251</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb bb">10 <i>Years</i>&rsquo;<br /><i>Average</i></td> <td class="tccm allb">83,392</td> <td class="tccm allb">16,074</td> <td class="tccm allb">122,099</td> <td class="tccm allb">221,565</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The rapid headway which colonial butter has made in British
+markets is shown by the fact that for the five years ended 30th of
+June 1900 the import had grown from 12,949 tons to 37,534 tons
+per annum, or an increase of 24,585 tons. It is during the mid-winter
+months that the colonial butter from Australasia arrives on the
+British markets, while that from Canada begins to arrive in July,
+and virtually ceases in the following January. The bulk of the
+Canadian butter reaches British markets during August, September
+and October; the bulk of the Australasian in December, January
+and February.</p>
+
+<p>It appears to be demonstrated by the experience of the last decade
+of the 19th century that the United Kingdom is quite unable to turn
+out sufficient dairy produce to supply its own population. In the
+year ended 30th of June 1891 the total import of butter was 102,500
+tons, and for the year ended 30th of June 1900 it was 170,700 tons,
+which shows an annual average increase in the decade of 6800 tons.
+This growth was on the whole very uniform, any disturbance in its
+regularity being attributable more to the deficient seasons in the
+colonies and foreign countries than to the bountiful seasons at home.
+Twice in the decade the import of butter from colonial sources fell
+off slightly from the previous year, namely, in 1896 and 1898, while
+only once was there any decrease in the foreign supply, and this
+occurred in 1900. In 1896 the colonial supply fell off by 5000 tons,
+principally owing to drought in Australia, but from foreign countries
+this deficiency was more than made good, as the increased import
+from these sources exceeded 16,500 tons. In 1900 the position was
+reversed, for while the foreign import fell away to the extent of over
+8000 tons, the supply from the colonies exceeded that of 1899 by
+15,000 tons, thus leaving a gain in the quantity of imported butter
+of nearly 7000 tons on the year. Table XII. shows that over the
+ten years, 1891-1900, the import of colonial butter was augmented
+by 34,600 tons, and that of foreign by 33,600 tons, so that the increased
+import is fairly divided between colonial and foreign sources.
+If, however, the last five years of the period be taken, it will be seen
+that the increases in the arrivals of colonial butter have far exceeded
+those from foreign countries. Between 1891 and 1900 the Australasian
+colonies increased their quota by 13,400 tons, and Canada by
+11,100 tons. Of foreign countries, Denmark showed the greatest
+development in the supply of imported butter, which increased in
+the ten years by 28,678 tons. Next came Russia and Holland, with
+increases respectively of 7207 tons and 6589 tons. Sweden, which
+made steady progress from 1891 to 1896, subsequently declined,
+and in 1900 sent 1400 tons less than in 1891. France and Germany
+are rapidly falling away, and the latter country will soon cease its
+supply altogether. Up to 1896 it was 6000 tons annually; by 1900
+it had fallen to 1850 tons. France, which in 1892 sent to the United
+Kingdom 29,000 tons, regularly declined, and in 1900 sent only
+16,800. Among the countries sending the smaller quantities, Argentina,
+Belgium and Norway are all gradually increasing their supplies;
+but their totals are comparatively insignificant, as they together
+contributed in 1900 only 6400 tons out of a total foreign supply of
+134,000 tons. The United States was erratic in its supplies during
+the decade, and up to 1900 had not made butter specially for export
+to the United Kingdom, as all the other foreign countries had done.
+Consequently it is only when supplies from elsewhere fail that
+American butter is sought for by British buyers. The large amount
+of salt in this butter, although suitable for the American palate,
+prevents its becoming popular in the United Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XIII.</span>&mdash;<i>Annual Imports of Butter into the United Kingdom,
+1897-1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">From</td> <td class="tcc allb">1897.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1899.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1900.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Denmark</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,334,726</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,465,030</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,430,052</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,486,342</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Australasia</td> <td class="tcr rb">269,432</td> <td class="tcr rb">228,563</td> <td class="tcr rb">366,944</td> <td class="tcr rb">509,910</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">448,128</td> <td class="tcr rb">416,821</td> <td class="tcr rb">353,942</td> <td class="tcr rb">322,048</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Holland</td> <td class="tcr rb">278,631</td> <td class="tcr rb">269,631</td> <td class="tcr rb">284,810</td> <td class="tcr rb">282,805</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Russia*</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcr rb">209,738</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sweden</td> <td class="tcr rb">299,214</td> <td class="tcr rb">294,962</td> <td class="tcr rb">245,599</td> <td class="tcr rb">196,041</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Canada</td> <td class="tcr rb">109,402</td> <td class="tcr rb">156,865</td> <td class="tcr rb">250,083</td> <td class="tcr rb">138,313</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United States</td> <td class="tcr rb">154,196</td> <td class="tcr rb">66,712</td> <td class="tcr rb">159,137</td> <td class="tcr rb">56,046</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Germany</td> <td class="tcr rb">51,761</td> <td class="tcr rb">41,231</td> <td class="tcr rb">36,953</td> <td class="tcr rb">36,042</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Other countries</td> <td class="tcr rb">272,312</td> <td class="tcr rb">269,645</td> <td class="tcr rb">262,331</td> <td class="tcr rb">141,231</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">3,217,802</td> <td class="tcr allb">3,209,153</td> <td class="tcr allb">3,389,851</td> <td class="tcr allb">3,378,516</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Denmark</td> <td class="tcr rb">41.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">45.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">42.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">44.0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Australasia</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.0</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Holland</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Russia*</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sweden</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Canada</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United States</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Germany</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Other countries</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">8.4</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">8.4</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7.7</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">4.2</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc" colspan="5">* Not shown separately in the Trade and Navigation Returns
+prior to 1900.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The sources whence the United Kingdom receives butter from
+abroad are sufficiently indicated in Table XIII., which shows the
+absolute quantities and the relative proportions sent by the chief
+contributory countries in each of the four years 1897 to 1900, the
+order of precedence of the several countries being in accord with
+the figures for 1900. Denmark, as a result of the efforts made by
+that little kingdom to supply a sound product of uniform quality,
+possesses over 40% of the trade, and in the year 1900 received from
+the United Kingdom upwards of £8,000,000 for butter and over
+£3,000,000 for bacon, the raising of pigs for the consumption of
+separated milk being an important adjunct of the dairying industry
+in Denmark, where butter factories are extensively maintained on
+the co-operative principle. It is worthy of note that some at least
+of the butter received in the United Kingdom from Russia is made
+in Siberia, whence it is sent at the outset on a long land journey in
+refrigerated railway cars for shipment at a Baltic port, usually Riga.
+The countries not specially enumerated in Table XIII. from which
+butter is sent to the United Kingdom are Argentina, Belgium,
+Norway and Spain&mdash;these are included in &ldquo;other countries.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In Table XIV., relating to the estimated home production of
+cheese and the imports of that article, the ten years&rsquo; average indicates
+a home-made supply of 555.3%, imports of colonial cheese 24.2%,
+and imports of foreign cheese 20.5%. Comparing, however, the first
+with the last year of the period 1891-1900, it appears that in 1891
+the proportions were 58.6% home-made, 17.2% colonial and
+24.2% foreign, whereas in 1900 the percentages were 50.3, 28.9
+and 20.8 respectively. Hence the colonial contribution (chiefly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page759" id="page759"></a>759</span>
+Canadian) has gained ground at the expense both of the home-made
+and of the foreign. Again, comparing 1891 with 1900, the import
+of cheese into the United Kingdom increased to the extent of only
+24,500 tons, so that it shows no expansion comparable with that
+of butter, which increased by about 70,000 tons. Simultaneously
+the estimated home production diminished by 17,000 tons.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XIV.</span>&mdash;<i>Estimated Home Production and Imports of Cheese
+into the United Kingdom for the Ten Years ended 30th June
+1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year ended<br />30th June.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Home<br />Production,<br /><i>estimated.</i></td> <td class="tccm allb">Imported<br />Colonial.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Imported<br />Foreign.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Tons.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcc rb">147,078</td> <td class="tcc rb">43,228</td> <td class="tcc rb">60,816</td> <td class="tcc rb">251,122</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1892</td> <td class="tcc rb">148,624</td> <td class="tcc rb">45,781</td> <td class="tcc rb">59,452</td> <td class="tcc rb">253,857</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1893</td> <td class="tcc rb">140,394</td> <td class="tcc rb">55,549</td> <td class="tcc rb">56,767</td> <td class="tcc rb">252,710</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1894</td> <td class="tcc rb">131,843</td> <td class="tcc rb">57,322</td> <td class="tcc rb">52,498</td> <td class="tcc rb">241,663</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1895</td> <td class="tcc rb">150,611</td> <td class="tcc rb">61,622</td> <td class="tcc rb">52,570</td> <td class="tcc rb">264,803</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1896</td> <td class="tcc rb">137,148</td> <td class="tcc rb">62,478</td> <td class="tcc rb">44,569</td> <td class="tcc rb">244,195</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1897</td> <td class="tcc rb">130,000</td> <td class="tcc rb">67,028</td> <td class="tcc rb">46,317</td> <td class="tcc rb">243,345</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1898</td> <td class="tcc rb">148,260</td> <td class="tcc rb">77,620</td> <td class="tcc rb">49,114</td> <td class="tcc rb">274,994</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">150,000</td> <td class="tcc rb">73,752</td> <td class="tcc rb">46,985</td> <td class="tcc rb">270,737</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb">130,000</td> <td class="tcc rb">74,702</td> <td class="tcc rb">53,903</td> <td class="tcc rb">258,605</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb"><i>10 Years</i>&rsquo;<br /><i>Average</i></td> <td class="tccm allb">141,396</td> <td class="tccm allb">61,908</td> <td class="tccm allb">52,299</td> <td class="tccm allb">255,603</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>In imported colonial cheese Canada virtually has the field to itself,
+for the only other colonial cheese which finds its way into the United
+Kingdom is from New Zealand, but the amount of this kind is comparatively
+insignificant, having been in 1900 only 4000 tons out of
+a total import of 128,600 tons. Australia, in several seasons since
+1891, sent small quantities, but they are not worth quoting.</p>
+
+<p>From foreign countries the decline in the export of cheese is mainly
+in the case of the United States, which shipped to British ports
+10,000 tons less in 1900 than in 1891. France also is losing its cheese
+trade in British markets, and is being supplanted by Belgium. In
+1891 France supplied over 3000 tons, in 1900 the import was below
+2000 tons. Belgium in 1891 supplied less than 1000 tons, but in
+1900 contributed 2600 tons. The import trade in Dutch cheese
+remains almost stationary. In 1891 it amounted to 15,300 tons, in
+1899 it was 15,600 tons, whilst in 1900, owing to exceptionally high
+prices, which stimulated the manufacture, it reached 17,000 tons.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XV.</span>&mdash;<i>Annual Imports of Cheese into the United Kingdom,
+1897-1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">From</td> <td class="tcc allb">1897.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1899.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1900.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Canada</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,526,664</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,432,181</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,337,198</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,511,872</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United States</td> <td class="tcr rb">631,616</td> <td class="tcr rb">485,995</td> <td class="tcr rb">590,737</td> <td class="tcr rb">680,583</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Holland</td> <td class="tcr rb">297,604</td> <td class="tcr rb">292,925</td> <td class="tcr rb">328,541</td> <td class="tcr rb">327,817</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Australasia</td> <td class="tcr rb">68,615</td> <td class="tcr rb">44,608</td> <td class="tcr rb">32,294</td> <td class="tcr rb">86,513</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">36,358</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,086</td> <td class="tcr rb">34,307</td> <td class="tcr rb">35,110</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Other countries</td> <td class="tcr rb">42,321</td> <td class="tcr rb">50,657</td> <td class="tcr rb">60,992</td> <td class="tcr rb">69,910</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,603,178</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,339,452</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,384,069</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,711,805</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td> <td class="tcc rb">%</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Canada</td> <td class="tcr rb">58.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">61.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">56.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">55.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United States</td> <td class="tcr rb">24.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">24.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">25.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Holland</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Australasia</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Other countries</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.6</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td> <td class="tcr allb">100.0</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Over 80% of the cheese imported into the United Kingdom is
+derived from North America, but the bulk of the trade belongs to
+Canada, which supplies nearly 60% of the entire import. The value
+of the cheese exported from Canada to the United Kingdom in the
+calendar year 1900 was close upon £3,800,000. As is shown in
+Table XV. below, Holland, Australasia and France participate in
+this trade, whilst amongst the &ldquo;other countries&rdquo; are Germany,
+Italy and Russia. The cheese sent from North America and Australasia
+is mostly of the substantial Cheddar type, whereas soft or
+&ldquo;fancy&rdquo; cheese is the dominant feature of the French shipments.
+Thus, in the calendar year 1900 the average price of the cheese
+imported into the United Kingdom from France was 61s. per cwt.,
+whilst the average value of the cheese from all other sources was
+50s. per cwt., there being a difference of 11s. in favour of the &ldquo;soft&rdquo;
+cheese of France.</p>
+
+<p>The imports of butter and margarine into the United Kingdom
+were not separately distinguished before the year 1886. Previous to
+that date they amounted, at five-year intervals, to the following
+aggregate quantities:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc">1870.</td> <td class="tcc">1875.</td> <td class="tcc">1880.</td> <td class="tcc">1885.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc">1,159,210</td> <td class="tcc">1,467,870</td> <td class="tcc">2,326,305</td> <td class="tcc">2,401,373</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>For the same years the imports of cheese registered the subjoined
+totals:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc">1870.</td> <td class="tcc">1875.</td> <td class="tcc">1880.</td> <td class="tcc">1885.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc">1,041,281</td> <td class="tcc">1,627,748</td> <td class="tcc">1,775,997</td> <td class="tcc">1,833,832</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The imports of butter and margarine, both separately and together,
+and also the imports of cheese in each year from 1886 to 1900
+inclusive, are set out in Table XVI., the most significant feature of
+which is the rapid expansion it shows in the imports of butter. In
+the space of nine years, between 1887 and 1896, the quantity was
+doubled. On the other hand, the general tendency of the imports
+of margarine, which have been much more uniform than those of
+butter, has been in the direction of decline since 1892. It is necessary,
+however, to point out that there has been an increase in the
+number of margarine factories in the United Kingdom, and in the
+quantity of margarine manufactured in them, during the last few
+years. Taking the imports of butter and margarine together, the
+aggregate in 1889 and also in 1900 was practically three times as
+large as a quarter of a century earlier, in 1875. The imports of
+cheese have increased at a less rapid rate than those of butter, and
+the quantity imported in 1900, which was a maximum, fell considerably
+short of twice the quantity in 1875. In 1886, 1887, 1888,
+1890 and 1892 the imports of cheese exceeded those of butter, but since
+the last-named year those of butter have always been the larger, and
+1899 were fully a million cwt. more than the cheese imports. The
+cheapness of imported fresh meat has probably had the effect of
+checking the growth of the demand for cheese amongst the industrial
+classes.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XVI.</span>&mdash;<i>Imports of Butter, Margarine and Cheese into the
+United Kingdom, 1886-1900.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Margarine.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total Butter<br />and<br />Margarine.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Cheese.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1886</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,543,566</td> <td class="tcr rb">887,974</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,431,540</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,734,890</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1887</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,513,134</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,276,140</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,789,274</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,836,789</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1888</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,671,433</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,139,743</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,811,176</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,917,616</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,927,842</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,241,690</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,169,532</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,907,999</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1890</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,027,717</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,079,856</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,107,573</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,144,074</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,135,607</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,235,430</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,371,037</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,041,325</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1892</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,183,009</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,305,350</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,488,359</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,232,817</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1893</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,327,474</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,299,970</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,627,444</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,077,462</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1894</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,574,835</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,109,325</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,684,160</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,266,145</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1895</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,825,662</td> <td class="tcr rb">940,168</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,765,830</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,133,819</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1896</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,037,718</td> <td class="tcr rb">925,934</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,963,652</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,244,525</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1897</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,217,802</td> <td class="tcr rb">936,543</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,154,345</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,603,178</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1898</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,209,153</td> <td class="tcr rb">900,615</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,343,026</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,384,069</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1999</td> <td class="tcc rb">3,389,851</td> <td class="tcr rb">953,175</td> <td class="tcc rb">4,343,026</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,384,069</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">3,378,516</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">920,416</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">4,298,932</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2,711,805</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The imports of condensed milk into the United Kingdom were
+not separately distinguished before 1888. In that year they
+amounted to 352,332 cwt. The quantities imported in subsequent
+years were the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Year.</td> <td class="tcc tb bb rb2">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc tcc tb bb rb">Year.</td> <td class="tcc tcc tb bb rb2">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc tb bb rb">Year.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Cwt.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1889</td> <td class="tcc rb2">389,892</td> <td class="tcc rb">1893</td> <td class="tcc rb2">501,005</td> <td class="tcc rb">1897</td> <td class="tcc rb">756,243</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1890</td> <td class="tcc rb2">407,426</td> <td class="tcc rb">1894</td> <td class="tcc rb2">529,465</td> <td class="tcc rb">1898</td> <td class="tcc rb">817,274</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcc rb2">444,666</td> <td class="tcc rb">1895</td> <td class="tcc rb2">545,394</td> <td class="tcc rb">1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">824,599</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1892</td> <td class="tcc rb2 bb">481,374</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1896</td> <td class="tcc rb2 bb">611,335</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">986,741</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The quantity thus increased continuously in each year after 1889,
+with the result that in 1900 the imports had grown to nearly three
+times the amount of those in 1889. Simultaneously, over the period
+1889-1900 the annual value of the imports steadily advanced from
+£704,849 to £1,405,033. Thus, while the imports of condensed milk
+trebled in quantity, they doubled in value. A fair proportion is,
+however, exported, as is shown in the following statement of exports
+of imported condensed milk for the four years 1897 to 1900:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc">1897.</td> <td class="tcc">1898.</td> <td class="tcc">1899.</td> <td class="tcc">1900.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">Quantity, &nbsp; cwt.</td> <td class="tcc">143,932</td> <td class="tcc">133,596</td> <td class="tcc">118,394</td> <td class="tcc">164,602</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Value</td> <td class="tcc">£274,578</td> <td class="tcc">£256,525</td> <td class="tcc">£228,446</td> <td class="tcc">£309,460</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>There is also an export trade in condensed milk made in the
+United Kingdom. Thus, in 1892 the exports of home-made condensed
+milk amounted to 61,442 cwt., valued at £133,556. By 1896
+the quantity had almost doubled, and reached 111,959 cwt., of the
+value of £224,831. In subsequent years the exports were:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc">1897.</td> <td class="tcc">1898.</td> <td class="tcc">1899.</td> <td class="tcc">1900.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">Quantity, &nbsp; cwt.</td> <td class="tcc">154,901</td> <td class="tcc">178,055</td> <td class="tcc">185,749</td> <td class="tcc">209,447</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Value</td> <td class="tcc">£302,748</td> <td class="tcc">£343,070</td> <td class="tcc">£353,819</td> <td class="tcc">£390,559</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page760" id="page760"></a>760</span></p>
+
+<p>Milk and cream (fresh or preserved other than condensed) received
+no separate classification in the imports until 1894, in which year
+the quantity imported was 161,633 gallons, followed by 126,995
+gallons in 1895, and 22,776 gallons in 1896. The quantities have
+since been returned by weight&mdash;10,006 cwt. in 1897, 10,691 cwt. in
+1898, 7859 cwt. in 1899, and 15,638 cwt. in 1900. The values of
+these imports in the successive years 1894 to 1900 were £21,371,
+£19,991, £5489, £9848, £11,293, £16,068 and £26,837.</p>
+
+<p>The total values of the imports of dairy produce of all kinds&mdash;butter,
+margarine, cheese, &amp;c.&mdash;into the United Kingdom were, at
+five-year intervals between 1875 and 1890, the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc">1875.</td> <td class="tcc">1880.</td> <td class="tcc">1885.</td> <td class="tcc">1890.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Value</td> <td class="tcc">£13,211,592</td> <td class="tcc">£17,232,548</td> <td class="tcc">£15,632,852</td> <td class="tcc">£19,505,798</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XVII.</span>&mdash;<i>Values of Dairy Products imported into the United
+Kingdom from 1891 to 1900, in Thousands of Pounds Sterling.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Butter.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Margarine.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Cheese.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Condensed<br />Milk.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">£1000.</td> <td class="tcc rb">£1000.</td> <td class="tcc rb">£1000.</td> <td class="tcc rb">£1000.</td> <td class="tcc rb">£1000.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcc rb">11,591</td> <td class="tcc rb">3558</td> <td class="tcc rb">4813</td> <td class="tcc rb">900</td> <td class="tcc rb">20,863</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1892</td> <td class="tcc rb">11,965</td> <td class="tcc rb">3713</td> <td class="tcc rb">5417</td> <td class="tcc rb">930</td> <td class="tcc rb">22,025</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1893</td> <td class="tcc rb">12,754</td> <td class="tcc rb">3655</td> <td class="tcc rb">5161</td> <td class="tcc rb">1010</td> <td class="tcc rb">22,580</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1894</td> <td class="tcc rb">13,457</td> <td class="tcc rb">3045</td> <td class="tcc rb">5475</td> <td class="tcc rb">1079</td> <td class="tcc rb">23,077</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1895</td> <td class="tcc rb">14,245</td> <td class="tcc rb">2557</td> <td class="tcc rb">4675</td> <td class="tcc rb">1084</td> <td class="tcc rb">22,581</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1896</td> <td class="tcc rb">15,344</td> <td class="tcc rb">2498</td> <td class="tcc rb">4900</td> <td class="tcc rb">1170</td> <td class="tcc rb">23,920</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1897</td> <td class="tcc rb">15,917</td> <td class="tcc rb">2485</td> <td class="tcc rb">5886</td> <td class="tcc rb">1398</td> <td class="tcc rb">25,715</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1898</td> <td class="tcc rb">15,962</td> <td class="tcc rb">2384</td> <td class="tcc rb">4970</td> <td class="tcc rb">1436</td> <td class="tcc rb">24,779</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">17,214</td> <td class="tcc rb">2549</td> <td class="tcc rb">5503</td> <td class="tcc rb">1455</td> <td class="tcc rb">26,747</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">17,450</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2465</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">6838</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1743</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">28,544</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The values in each year of the closing decade of the 19th century
+are set forth in Table XVII., where the totals in the last column
+include small sums for margarine-cheese and, since 1893, for fresh
+milk and cream. The aggregate value more than doubled during
+the last quarter of the century. The earliest year for which the value
+of imported butter is separately available is 1886, when it amounted
+to £8,141,438. Thirteen years later this sum had more than doubled,
+and it is an impressive fact that in the closing year of the century
+the United Kingdom should have expended on imported butter alone
+a sum closely approximating to 17½ million pounds sterling, equivalent
+to about three-fourths of the total amount disbursed on imported
+wheat grain.<a name="fa16a" id="fa16a" href="#ft16a"><span class="sp">16</span></a></p>
+
+<p>The imports of margarine&mdash;that is, of margarine specifically
+declared to be such&mdash;into the United Kingdom are derived almost
+entirely from Holland. Out of a total of 920,416 cwt. imported in
+1900 Holland supplied 862,154 cwt., and out of £2,464,839 expended
+on imported margarine in the same year Holland received £2,295,174.
+To the imports in the year named Holland contributed 93.7%;
+France, 2.9; Norway, 0.9; all other countries, 2.5; so that Holland
+possesses almost a monopoly of this trade. The quantities of imported
+butter, margarine and cheese that are again exported from
+the United Kingdom are trivial when compared with the imports,
+as will be seen from the following quantities and values in the three
+years 1898 to 1900:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1899.</td> <td class="tcc lb tb bb rb2">1900.</td> <td class="tcc tb bb rb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1899.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1900.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb2">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">£</td> <td class="tcc rb">£</td> <td class="tcc rb">£</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Butter</td> <td class="tcc rb">63,491</td> <td class="tcc rb">50,453</td> <td class="tcc rb2">51,583</td> <td class="tcr rb">319,806</td> <td class="tcr rb">257,999</td> <td class="tcr rb">258,931</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Margarine</td> <td class="tcc rb">10,023</td> <td class="tcc rb">13,139</td> <td class="tcc rb2">11,326</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,721</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,319</td> <td class="tcr rb">27,882</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Cheese</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">56,694</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">56,390</td> <td class="tcc rb2 bb">55,982</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">159,210</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">163,991</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">168,369</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>There is also a very small export trade in butter and cheese made
+in the United Kingdom, but its insignificant character is evident
+from the subjoined details as to quantities and values for the years
+named:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1899.</td> <td class="tcc lb tb bb rb2">1900.</td> <td class="tcc tb bb rb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1899.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1900.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb2">Cwt.</td> <td class="tcc rb">£</td> <td class="tcc rb">£</td> <td class="tcc rb">£</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Butter</td> <td class="tcc rb">11,359</td> <td class="tcc rb">9,936</td> <td class="tcc rb2">10,127</td> <td class="tcc rb">59,731</td> <td class="tcc rb">53,195</td> <td class="tcc rb">53,701</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Cheese</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">10,126</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">9,758</td> <td class="tcc rb2 bb">9,356</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">36,803</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">35,890</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">36,691</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">American Dairying</p>
+
+<p>The development of the dairying industry in the vast region
+of the United States of America has been described in the
+official <i>Year-Book</i> by Major Henry E. Alvord, chief of the dairy
+division of the bureau of animal industry in the department
+of agriculture at Washington. The beginning of the 20th century
+found the industry upon an altogether higher level than seemed
+possible a few decades earlier. The milch cow herself, upon which
+the whole business rests, has become almost as much a machine
+as a natural product, and a very different creature from the
+average animal of bygone days. The few homely and inconvenient
+implements for use in the laborious duties of the dairy
+have been replaced by perfected appliances, skilfully devised
+to accomplish their object and to lighten labour. Long rows
+of shining metal pans no longer adorn rural dooryards. The
+factory system of co-operative or concentrated manufacture
+has so far taken the place of home dairying that in entire states
+the cheese vat or press is as rare as the handloom, and in many
+counties it is as difficult to find a farm churn as a spinning-wheel.
+An illustration of the nature of the changes is afforded in the
+butter-making district of northern Vermont, at St Albans, the
+business centre of Franklin county. In 1880 the first creamery
+was built in this county; ten years later there were 15. Now
+a creamery company at St Albans has upwards of 50 skimming
+or separating stations distributed through Franklin and adjoining
+counties. To these is carried the milk from more than 30,000
+cows. Farmers who possess separators at home may deliver
+cream which, after being inspected and tested, is accepted and
+credited at its actual butter value, just as other raw material is
+sold to mills and factories. The separated cream is conveyed
+by rail and waggon to the central factory, where in one room
+from 10 to 12 tons of butter are made every working day&mdash;a
+single churning place for a whole county! The butter is all of
+standard quality, &ldquo;extra creamery,&rdquo; and is sold on its reputation
+upon orders received in advance of its manufacture. The price
+is relatively higher than the average for the product of the same
+farms fifty years earlier. This is mainly due to better average
+quality and greater uniformity&mdash;two important advantages
+of the creamery system.</p>
+
+<p>In one important detail dairy labour is the same as a century
+ago. Cows still have to be milked by hand. Although many
+attempts have been made, and patent after patent has been
+issued, no mechanical contrivance has yet proved a practical
+success as a substitute for the human hand in milking. Consequently,
+twice (or thrice) daily every day in the year, the dairy
+cows must be milked by manual labour. This is one of the main
+items of labour in dairying, and is a delicate and important duty.
+Assuming 10 cows per hour to a milker, which implies quick
+work, it requires the continuous service of an army of 300,000
+men, working 10 or 12 hours a day throughout the year, to
+milk the cows kept in the United States.</p>
+
+<p>The business of producing milk for urban consumption, with
+the accompanying agencies for transportation and distribution,
+has grown to immense proportions. In many places the milk
+trade is regulated and supervised by excellent municipal ordinances,
+which have done much to prevent adulteration and to
+improve the average quality of the supply. Quite as much is,
+however, being done by private enterprise through large milk
+companies, well organized and equipped, and establishments
+which make a speciality of serving milk and cream of fixed
+quality and exceptional purity. Such efforts to furnish &ldquo;certified&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;guaranteed&rdquo; milk, together with general competition
+for the best class of trade, are doing more to raise the
+standard of quality and improve the service than all the legal
+measures. The buildings and equipment of some of these modern
+dairies are beyond precedent. This branch of dairying is
+advancing fast, upon the safe basis of care, cleanliness and
+better sanitary conditions.</p>
+
+<p>Cheese-making has been transferred bodily from the domain of
+domestic arts to that of manufactures. In the middle of the 19th
+century about 100,000,000 &#8468; of cheese was made yearly in the
+United States, and all of it in farm dairies. At the beginning of
+the 20th century the annual production was about 300,000,000 &#8468;,
+and 96 or 97% of this was made in factories. Of these there
+are nearly 3000, but they vary greatly in capacity, and some are
+very small. New York and Wisconsin possess a thousand each,
+but the former state makes nearly twice as much cheese as the
+latter, whilst the two together produce three-fourths of the entire
+output of the country. A change is taking place in the direction
+of bringing a number of factories previously independent into a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page761" id="page761"></a>761</span>
+&ldquo;combination&rdquo; or under the same management. This tends to
+improve the quality and secure greater uniformity in the product,
+and often reduces cost of manufacture. More than nine-tenths of
+all the cheese made is of the familiar standard type, copied after
+the English Cheddar, but new kinds and imitations of foreign
+varieties are increasing. The annual export of
+cheese from the United States ranges between
+30,000,000 and 50,000,000 &#8468;. The consumption
+<i>per capita</i> does not exceed 3½ &#8468; per annum, which
+is much less than in most European countries.</p>
+
+<p>Butter differs from cheese in that it is still
+made much more largely on farms in the United
+States than in creameries. Creamery butter controls
+all the large markets, but this represents
+little more than one-third of the entire business.
+Estimating the annual butter product of the entire
+country at 1,400,000,000 &#8468; not much over 500,000,000 &#8468; of
+this is made at the 7500 or 8000 creameries in operation.
+Iowa is the greatest butter-producing state, and the one
+in which the greater proportion is made on the factory
+plan. The total output of butter in this state is one-tenth
+of all made in the Union. The average quality of butter
+has materially improved since the introduction of the creamery
+system and the use of modern appliances. Nevertheless, a
+vast quantity of poor butter is made&mdash;enough to afford a
+large and profitable business in collecting it at country stores at
+grease prices or a little more, and then rendering or renovating it
+by patent processes. This renovated butter has been fraudulently
+sold to a considerable extent as the true creamery article,
+of which it is a fair imitation while fresh, and several states have
+made laws for the identification of the product and to prevent
+buyers from being imposed upon. No butter is imported, and the
+quantity exported is insignificant, although there is beginning to
+be a foreign demand for American butter. The home consumption
+is estimated at the yearly rate of 20 &#8468; per person, which, if
+correct, would indicate Americans to be the greatest butter-eating
+people in the world. The people of the United States also consume
+millions of pounds every year of butter substitutes and
+imitations, such as oleomargarine and butterine. Most of this is
+believed to be butter by those who use it, and the state dairy
+commissioners are busily employed in carrying out the laws
+intended to protect purchasers from these butter frauds.</p>
+
+<p>The by-products of dairying have, within recent years, been put
+to economical uses, in an increasing degree. For every pound of
+butter made there are 15 to 20 &#8468; of skim-milk and about 3 &#8468; of
+butter-milk, and for every pound of cheese nearly 9 &#8468; of whey.
+Up to 1889 or 1890 enormous quantities of skim-milk and butter-milk
+from the creameries and of whey from the cheese factories
+were entirely wasted. At farm dairies these by-products are
+generally used to advantage in feeding animals, but at the
+factories&mdash;especially at the seasons of greatest milk supply&mdash;this
+most desirable method of utilization is to a great extent impracticable.
+In many places new branches have been instituted
+for the making of sugar-of-milk and other commercial products
+from whey, and for the utilization of skim-milk in various ways.
+The albumin of the latter is extracted for use with food products
+and in the arts. The casein is desiccated and prepared as a
+substitute for eggs in baking, as the basis of an enamel paint, and
+as a substitute for glue in paper-sizing. It has also been proposed
+to solidify it to make buttons, combs, brush-backs, electrical
+insulators and similar articles.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>No census of cows in the United States was taken until the year
+1840, but they have been enumerated in each subsequent decennial
+census. From 23 to 27 cows to every 100 of the population were
+required to keep the country supplied with milk, butter and cheese,
+and provide for the export of dairy products. The export trade,
+though it has fluctuated considerably, has never exceeded the
+produce of 500,000 cows. At the close of the 19th century it was
+estimated that there was one milch cow in the United States for
+every four persons, making the number of cows about 17,500,000.
+They are, however, very unevenly distributed, being largely concentrated
+in the great dairy states, Iowa leading with 1,500,000 cows,
+and being followed closely by New York. In the middle and eastern
+states the milk product goes very largely to the supply of the numerous
+large towns and cities. In the central, west and north-west
+butter is the leading dairy product.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table XVIII.</span>&mdash;<i>Estimated Number of Cows and Quantity and Value of Dairy
+Products in the United States in 1899.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Cows.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Product.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Rate of<br />Product<br />per Cow.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total Product.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Rate of<br />Value.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total Value.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Cents.</td> <td class="tcc rb">Dollars.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">11,000,000</td> <td class="tcl rb">Butter</td> <td class="tcl rb">130 &#8468;</td> <td class="tcl rb">1,430,000,000 &#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">257,400,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">1,000,000</td> <td class="tcl rb">Cheese</td> <td class="tcl rb">300 &#8468;</td> <td class="tcl rb">&ensp;300,000,000 &#8468;</td> <td class="tcc rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">27,000,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb bb">5,500,000</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">Milk</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">380 gals.</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">2,090,000,000 gals.</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">167,200,000</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Table XVIII. shows approximately the quantity and value of the
+dairy products of the United States for a typical year, the grand total
+representing a value of $451,600,000. Adding to this the skim-milk,
+butter-milk and whey, at their proper feeding value, and the calves
+dropped yearly, the annual aggregate value of the produce of the
+dairy cows exceeds $500,000,000, or is more than one hundred
+million pounds sterling. Accepting these estimates as conservative,
+they show that the commercial importance of the dairy industry
+of the United States is such as to justify all reasonable provisions
+for guarding its interests.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. Fr.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1a" id="ft1a" href="#fa1a"><span class="fn">1</span></a> A gallon of milk weighs 10.3 &#8468;, so that very little error is involved
+in converting pounds to gallons by dividing the number of
+pounds by 10.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2a" id="ft2a" href="#fa2a"><span class="fn">2</span></a> A portable milk-weighing appliance is made in which the weight
+of the pail is included, and an indicator shows on a dial the exact
+weight in pounds and ounces, and likewise the volume in gallons and
+pints, of the milk in the pail. When the pail is empty the indicator
+of course points to zero.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3a" id="ft3a" href="#fa3a"><span class="fn">3</span></a> <i>Landw. Futterungslehre</i>, 5te Aufl., 1888, p. 249.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4a" id="ft4a" href="#fa4a"><span class="fn">4</span></a> The Analyst, April 1885, vol. x. p. 67.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5a" id="ft5a" href="#fa5a"><span class="fn">5</span></a> The evidence on this point taken by the Committee on Milk and
+Cream Regulations in 1900 is somewhat conflicting. The report
+states that an impression commonly prevails that the quality of milk
+is more or less determined by the nature and composition of the food
+which the cow receives. One witness said that farmers who produce
+milk for sale feed differently from what they do if they are producing
+for butter. Another stated that most of the statistics which go to
+show that food has no effect on milk fail, because the experiments are
+not carried far enough to counterbalance that peculiarity of the
+animal first to utilize the food for itself before utilizing it for the
+milk. A witness who kept a herd of 100 milking cows expressed the
+opinion that improvement in the quality of milk can be effected by
+feeding, though not to any large extent. On the other hand, it was
+maintained that the fat percentage in the milk of a cow cannot be
+raised by any manner or method of feeding. It is possible that in the
+case of cows very poorly fed the addition of rich food would alter the
+composition of their milk, but if the cows are well-fed to begin with,
+this would not be so. The proprietor of a herd of 500 milking cows
+did not think that feeding affected the quality of milk from ordinarily
+well-kept animals. An experimenter found that the result of resorting
+to rather poor feeding was that the first effect was produced upon
+the weight of the cow and not upon the milk; the animal began to
+get thin, losing its weight, though there was not very much effect
+upon the quality of the milk.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6a" id="ft6a" href="#fa6a"><span class="fn">6</span></a> <i>Journ. Roy. Agric. Soc.</i>, 1898.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft7a" id="ft7a" href="#fa7a"><span class="fn">7</span></a> Trans. Highl. and Agric. Soc. Scot., 1899.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft8a" id="ft8a" href="#fa8a"><span class="fn">8</span></a> <i>Report on Cheddar Cheese-Making</i>, London, 1899.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft9a" id="ft9a" href="#fa9a"><span class="fn">9</span></a> &ldquo;The Practice of Stilton Cheese-Making,&rdquo; <i>Journ. Roy. Agric.
+Soc.</i>, 1899.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft10a" id="ft10a" href="#fa10a"><span class="fn">10</span></a> <i>Experiment Station Record</i>, xii. 9 (Washington, 1901).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft11a" id="ft11a" href="#fa11a"><span class="fn">11</span></a> Market butter is sometimes deliberately over-weighted with
+water, and a fraudulent profit is obtained by selling this extra
+moisture at the price of butter.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft12a" id="ft12a" href="#fa12a"><span class="fn">12</span></a> &ldquo;Thermal Death-Point of Tubercle Bacilli, and Relation of same
+to Commercial Pasteurization of Milk,&rdquo; by H. L. Russell and E. G.
+Hastings.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft13a" id="ft13a" href="#fa13a"><span class="fn">13</span></a> <i>16th Rept. Wis. Agric. Expt. Station</i>, 1899, p. 129.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft14a" id="ft14a" href="#fa14a"><span class="fn">14</span></a> See also the article <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Adulteration</a></span>.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft15a" id="ft15a" href="#fa15a"><span class="fn">15</span></a> A special committee appointed by the council of the Royal
+Statistical Society commenced in 1901 an inquiry into the home production
+of milk and meat in the United Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft16a" id="ft16a" href="#fa16a"><span class="fn">16</span></a> In 1901 the United Kingdom imported 3,702,810 cwt. of butter,
+valued at £19,297,005, both totals being the largest on record.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAIS<a name="ar17" id="ar17"></a></span> (Fr. <i>dais</i>, <i>estrade</i>, Ital. <i>predella</i>), originally a part of the
+floor at the end of a medieval hall, raised a step above the rest of
+the building. On this the lord of the mansion dined with his
+friends at the high table, apart from the retainers and servants.
+In medieval halls there was generally a deep recessed bay window
+at one or at each end of the dais, supposed to be for retirement,
+or greater privacy than the open hall could afford. In France the
+word is understood as a canopy or hanging over a seat; probably
+the name was given from the fact that the seats of great men were
+then surmounted by such a feature. In ordinary use, the term
+means any raised platform in a room, for dignified occupancy.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAISY<a name="ar18" id="ar18"></a></span> (A.S. <i>daeges eage</i>, day&rsquo;s eye), the name applied to the
+plants constituting the genus <i>Bellis</i>, of the natural order Compositae.
+The genus contains ten species found in Europe and the
+Mediterranean region. The common daisy, <i>B. perennis</i>, is the
+only representative of the genus in the British Isles. It is a
+perennial, abundant everywhere in pastures and on banks in
+Europe, except in the most northerly regions, and in Asia Minor,
+and occurs as an introduced plant in North America. The stem
+of the daisy is short; the leaves, which are numerous and form
+a rosette, are slightly hairy, obovate-spathulate in shape, with
+rounded teeth on the margin in the upper part; and the root-stock
+is creeping, and of a brownish colour. The flowers are to be
+found from March to November, and occasionally in the winter
+months. The heads of flowers are solitary, the outer or ray-florets
+pink or white, the disk-florets bright yellow. The size and
+luxuriance of the plant are much affected by the nature of the
+soil in which it grows. The cultivated varieties, which are
+numerous, bear finely-coloured flowers, and make very effective
+borders for walks. What is known as the &ldquo;hen-and-chicken&rdquo;
+daisy has the main head surrounded by a brood of sometimes as
+many as ten or twelve small heads, formed in the axils of the
+scales of the involucre. The ray-florets curve inwards and
+&ldquo;close&rdquo; the flower-head in dull weather and towards evening.</p>
+
+<p>Chaucer writes&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="reg f90" summary="poem"><tr><td> <div class="poemr">
+<p>&ldquo;The daisie, or els the eye of the daie,</p>
+<p class="i05">The emprise, and the floure of flouris alle&rdquo;;</p>
+</div> </td></tr></table>
+
+<p class="noind">and again&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="reg f90" summary="poem"><tr><td> <div class="poemr">
+<p>&ldquo;To seen this floure agenst the sunne sprede</p>
+<p class="i05">Whan it riseth early by the morrow,</p>
+<p class="i05">That blissful sight softeneth all my sorrow&rdquo;;</p>
+</div> </td></tr></table>
+
+<p class="noind">and the flower is often alluded to with admiration by the other
+poets of nature. To the farmer, however, the daisy is a weed,
+and a most wasteful one, as it exhausts the soil and is not eaten
+by any kind of stock.</p>
+
+<p>In French the daisy is termed <i>la marguerite</i> (<span class="grk" title="margaritês">&#956;&#945;&#961;&#947;&#945;&#961;&#943;&#964;&#951;&#962;</span>, a
+pearl), and &ldquo;herb margaret&rdquo; is stated to be an old English
+appellation for it. In Scotland it is popularly called the gowan,
+and in Yorkshire it is the bairn wort, or flower beloved by children.
+The Christmas and Michaelmas daisies are species of <i>Aster</i>;
+the ox-eye daisy is <i>Chrysanthemum Leucanthemum</i>, a common
+weed in meadows and waste places. <i>B. perennis flore-pleno</i>, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page762" id="page762"></a>762</span>
+double daisy, consists of dwarf, showy, 3 to 4 in. plants, flowering
+freely in spring if grown in rich light soil, and frequently divided
+and transplanted. The white and pink forms, with the white and
+red quilled, and the variegated-leaved <i>aucubaefolia</i>, are some of
+the best.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAKAR,<a name="ar19" id="ar19"></a></span> a seaport of Senegal, and capital of French West
+Africa, in 14° 40&prime; N., 17° 24&prime; W. The town, which is strongly
+fortified, holds a commanding strategic position on the route
+between western Europe and Brazil and South Africa, being
+situated in the Gulf of Goree on the eastern side of the peninsula
+of Cape Verde, the most westerly point of Africa. It is the only
+port of Senegal affording safe anchorage for the largest ships.
+Pop. (1904), within the municipal limits, 18,447; including
+suburbs, 23,452.</p>
+
+<p>The town consists for the most part of broad and regular
+streets and possesses several fine public buildings, notably the
+palace of the governor-general. It is plentifully supplied with
+good water and is fairly healthy. It is the starting point of the
+railway to St Louis, and is within five days steam of Lisbon.
+The harbour, built in 1904-1908, is formed by two jetties, one
+of 6840 ft., the other of 1968 ft., the entrance being 720 ft.
+wide. There are three commercial docks, with over 7000 ft.
+of quayage, ships drawing 26 ft. being able to moor alongside.
+Cargo is transferred directly to the railway trucks. There is
+also a naval dock and arsenal with a torpedo-boat basin 755 ft.
+by 410 ft. and a dry dock 656 ft. long and 92 ft. broad. The
+Messageries Maritimes Company use the port as a coaling
+station and provisioning depot for their South American trade.
+Dakar is a regular port of call for other French lines and for
+the Elder Dempster boats sailing between Liverpool and the
+West Coast of Africa. It shares with Rufisque and St Louis
+the external trade of Senegal and the adjacent regions. For
+trade statistics see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Senegal</a></span>.</p>
+
+<p>Dakar was originally a dependency of Goree and was founded
+in 1862, a year after the declaration of a French protectorate over
+the mainland. The port was opened for commerce in 1867,
+and in 1885 its importance was greatly increased by the completion
+of the railway (163 m. long) to St Louis. Dakar thus
+came into direct communication with the countries of Upper
+Senegal and the middle Niger. In 1887 the town was made
+a commune on the French model, all citizens irrespective of
+colour being granted the franchise. In 1903 the offices of the
+governor-general and of the court of appeal of French West
+Africa were transferred from St Louis to Dakar, which is also
+the seat of a bishop. In February 1905 a submarine cable
+was laid between Brest and Dakar, affording direct telegraphic
+communication between France and her West African colonies
+by an all French route.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALAGUETE,<a name="ar20" id="ar20"></a></span> a town of the province of Cebú, island of
+Cebú, Philippine Islands, at the mouth of the Tapón river on
+the E. coast, 50 m. S.S.W. of Cebú, the capital. The town has
+a healthy climate, cool during November, December, January
+and February, and hot during the rest of the year. The inhabitants
+grow hemp, Indian corn, coffee, sibucao, cacao, cocoanuts
+(for copra) and sugar, weave rough fabrics and manufacture
+tuba (a kind of wine used as a stimulant), clay pots and jars,
+salt and soap. There is some fishing here. The language is
+Cebú-Visayan.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALBEATTIE,<a name="ar21" id="ar21"></a></span> a police burgh of Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland.
+Pop. (1901) 3469. It lies on Dalbeattie Burn, 14½ m. S.W.
+of Dumfries by the Glasgow &amp; South-Western railway. The
+town dates from 1780 and owes its rise to the granite quarries
+at Craignair and elsewhere in the vicinity, from which were
+derived the supplies used in the construction of the Thames
+Embankment, the docks at Odessa and Liverpool and other
+works. Besides quarrying, the industries include granite-polishing,
+concrete (crushed granite) works, dye-works, paper-mills
+and artificial manures. The estuary of the Urr, known
+as Rough Firth, is navigable by ships of from 80 to 100 tons,
+and small vessels can ascend as far as the mouth of Dalbeattie
+Burn, within a mile of the town. A mile to the north-west stand
+the ruins of the castle of Buittle or Botel, where lived John de
+Baliol, founder of Baliol college, who had married Dervorguila,
+daughter of Alan (d. 1234), the last &ldquo;king&rdquo; of Galloway.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALBERG,<a name="ar22" id="ar22"></a></span> the name of an ancient and distinguished German
+noble family, derived from the hamlet and castle (now in ruins)
+of Dalberg or Dalburg near Kreuznach in the Rhine Province.
+In the 14th century the original house of Dalberg became
+extinct in the male line, the fiefs passing to Johann Gerhard,
+chamberlain of the see of Worms, who married the heiress of
+his cousin, Anton of Dalberg, about 1330. His own family
+was of great antiquity, his ancestors having been hereditary
+ministerials of the bishop of Worms since the time of Ekbert
+the chamberlain, who founded in 1119 the Augustinian monastery
+of Frankenthal and died in 1132. By the close of the 15th
+century the Dalberg family had grown to be of such importance
+that, in 1494, the German King Maximilian I. granted them the
+honour of being the first to receive knighthood at the coronation;
+this part of the ceremonies being opened by the herald asking
+in a loud voice &ldquo;Is no Dalberg present?&rdquo; (<i>Ist kein Dalberg da?</i>).
+This picturesque privilege the family enjoyed till the end of the
+Holy Roman Empire. The elder line of the family of Dalberg-Dalberg
+became extinct in 1848, the younger, that of Dalberg-Herrnsheim,
+in 1833. The male line of the Dalbergs is now
+represented only by the family of Hessloch, descended from
+Gerhard of Dalberg (<i>c.</i> 1239), which in 1809 succeeded to the
+title and estates in Moravia and Bohemia of the extinct counts of
+Ostein.</p>
+
+<p>The following are the most noteworthy members of the family:</p>
+
+<p>1. <span class="sc">Johann von Dalberg</span> (1445-1503), chamberlain and
+afterwards bishop of Worms, son of Wolfgang von Dalberg.
+He studied at Erfurt and in Italy, where he took his degree
+of doctor <i>utriusque juris</i> at Ferrara and devoted himself more
+especially to the study of Greek. Returning to Germany, he
+became privy councillor to the elector palatine Philip, whom
+he assisted in bringing the university of Heidelberg to the height
+of its fame. He was instrumental in founding the first chair
+of Greek, which was filled by his friend Rudolph Agricola, and
+he also established the university library and a college for
+students of civil law. He was an ardent humanist, was president
+of the <i>Sodalitas Celtica</i> founded by the poet Konrad Celtes (q.v.),
+and corresponded with many of the leading scholars of his day,
+to whom he showed himself a veritable Maecenas. He was
+employed also on various diplomatic missions by the emperor
+and the elector.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See K. Morneweg, <i>Johann von Dalberg, ein deutscher Humanist und
+Bischof</i> (Heidelberg, 1887).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>2. <span class="sc">Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg</span> (1744-1817),
+archbishop-elector of Mainz, arch-chancellor of the Holy Roman
+Empire, and afterwards primate of the Confederation of the
+Rhine and grand-duke of Frankfort. He was the son of Franz
+Heinrich, administrator of Worms, one of the chief counsellors of
+the elector of Mainz. Karl had devoted himself to the study of
+canon law, and entered the church; and, having been appointed
+in 1772 governor of Erfurt, he won further advancement by his
+successful administration; in 1787 he was elected coadjutor of
+Mainz and of Worms, and in 1788 of Constance; in 1802 he
+became archbishop-elector of Mainz and arch-chancellor of the
+Empire. As statesman Dalberg was distinguished by his
+&ldquo;patriotic&rdquo; attitude, whether in ecclesiastical matters, in which
+he leaned to the Febronian view of a German national church, or
+in his efforts to galvanize the atrophied machinery of the Empire
+into some sort of effective central government of Germany.
+Failing in this, he turned to the rising star of Napoleon, believing
+that he had found in &ldquo;the truly great man, the mighty genius
+which governs the fate of the world,&rdquo; the only force strong
+enough to save Germany from dissolution. By the peace of
+Lunéville, accordingly, though he had to surrender Worms and
+Constance, he received Regensburg, Aschaffenburg and Wetzlar.
+On the dissolution of the Empire in 1806 he formally resigned the
+office of arch-chancellor in a letter to the emperor Francis, and
+was appointed by Napoleon prince primate of the Confederation
+of the Rhine. In 1810, after the peace of Vienna (Schönbrunn),
+the grand-duchy of Frankfort was created for his benefit out of his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page763" id="page763"></a>763</span>
+territories, which, in spite of the cession of Regensburg to
+Bavaria, were greatly augmented. Dalberg&rsquo;s subservience, as a
+prince of the Confederation, to Napoleon was specially resented
+since, as a priest, he had no excuse of necessity on the ground
+of saving family or dynastic interests; his fortunes therefore
+fell with those of Napoleon, and, when he died on the 10th of
+February 1817, of all his dignities he was in possession only of
+the archbishopric of Regensburg. Weak and shortsighted as a
+statesman, as a man and prelate Dalberg was amiable, conscientious
+and large-hearted. Himself a scholar and author, he
+was a notable patron of letters, and was the friend of Goethe,
+Schiller and Wieland.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Karl v. Beaulieu-Marconnay, <i>Karl von Dalberg und seine
+Zeit</i> (Weimar, 1879).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>3. <span class="sc">Wolfgang Heribert von Dalberg</span> (1750-1806), brother
+of the above. He was intendant of the theatre at Mannheim,
+which he brought to a high state of excellence. His chief claim to
+remembrance is that it was he who first put Schiller&rsquo;s earlier
+dramas on the stage, and it is to him that the poet&rsquo;s <i>Briefe an den
+Freiherrn von Dalberg</i> (Karlsruhe, 1819) are addressed. He
+himself wrote several plays, including adaptations of Shakespeare.
+His brother, Johann Friedrich Hugo von Dalberg (1752-1812),
+canon of Trier, Worms and Spires, had some vogue as a
+composer and writer on musical subjects.</p>
+
+<p>4. <span class="sc">Emmerich Joseph, Duc de Dalberg</span> (1773-1833), son of
+Baron Wolfgang Heribert. He was born at Mainz on the 30th of
+May 1773. In 1803 he entered the service of Baden, which he
+represented as envoy in Paris. After the peace of Schönbrunn
+(1809) he entered the service of Napoleon, who, in 1810, created
+him a duke and councillor of state. He had from the first been
+on intimate terms with Talleyrand, and retired from the public
+service when the latter fell out of the emperor&rsquo;s favour. In 1814
+he was a member of the provisional government by whom the
+Bourbons were recalled, and he attended the congress of Vienna,
+with Talleyrand, as minister plenipotentiary. He appended his
+signature to the decree of outlawry launched in 1815 by the
+European powers against Napoleon. For this his property in
+France was confiscated, but was given back after the second
+Restoration, when he became a minister of state and a peer of
+France. In 1816 he was sent as ambassador to Turin. The
+latter years of his life he spent on his estates at Herrnsheim,
+where he died on the 27th of April 1833.</p>
+
+<p>The due de Dalberg had inherited the family property of
+Herrnsheim from his uncle the arch-chancellor Karl von Dalberg,
+and this estate passed, through his daughter and heiress, Marie
+Louise Pelline de Dalberg, by her marriage with Sir (Ferdinand)
+Richard Edward Acton, 7th baronet (who assumed the additional
+name of Dalberg), to her son the historian, John Emerich
+Edward Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton (q.v.).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALE, ROBERT WILLIAM<a name="ar23" id="ar23"></a></span> (1829-1895), English Nonconformist
+divine, was born in London on the 1st of December
+1829, and was educated at Spring Hill College, Birmingham,
+for the Congregational ministry. In 1853 he was invited to
+Carr&rsquo;s Lane Chapel, Birmingham, as co-pastor with John Angell
+James (q.v.), on whose death in 1859 he became sole pastor for
+the rest of his life. In the London University M.A. examination
+(1853) Dale stood first in philosophy and won the gold medal.
+The degree of LL.D. was conferred upon him by the university
+of Glasgow during the lord rectorship of John Bright. Yale
+University gave him its D.D. degree, but he never used it, &ldquo;not
+because it came from America, but because I have a sentimental
+objection&mdash;perhaps it is something more&mdash;to divinity degrees.&rdquo;
+Dale displayed a keen interest in Liberal politics and in the
+municipal affairs of Birmingham; and his high moral ideal
+made him a great force on the progressive side. In 1886 he
+adhered to Mr Chamberlain in opposition to Irish Home Rule,
+but this difference did not diminish his influence even among
+those Liberals and Nonconformists who adopted the Gladstonian
+standpoint. In the education controversy of 1870 he
+took an important part, ably championing the Nonconformist
+position. When Mr Foster&rsquo;s bill appeared, Dale attacked it on
+the grounds that the schools would in many cases be purely
+denominational institutions, that the conscience clause gave
+inadequate protection, and that school boards were empowered
+by it to make grants out of the rates to maintain sectarian
+schools. He was himself in favour of secular education, claiming
+that it was the only logical solution and the only legitimate
+outcome of Nonconformist principles. In Birmingham the controversy
+was terminated in 1879 by a compromise, from which,
+however, Dale stood aloof. His interest in educational affairs
+had led him to accept a seat on the Birmingham school board.
+He was appointed a governor of the grammar school, served on
+the royal commission of education, and was also chairman of the
+council of Mansfield College, Oxford, with the foundation of
+which he had much to do. He was a strong advocate of disestablishment,
+holding that the church was essentially a spiritual
+brotherhood, and that any vestige of political authority impaired
+its spiritual work. In church polity he held that congregationalism
+constituted the most fitting environment in which
+religion could achieve her work. Perhaps the most effective
+contributions he made to ecclesiastical literature were those
+dealing with the history and principles of the congregational
+system. At his death on the 13th of March 1895 he left an unfinished
+MS. of the history of congregationalism, since edited
+and completed (1907) by his son, A. W. W. Dale, principal of
+Liverpool University.</p>
+
+<p>Dale&rsquo;s powers were fully appreciated by his colleagues in the
+congregational ministry, and at the early age of thirty-nine he
+was elected chairman of the Congregational union of England
+and Wales. His addresses from the chair on &ldquo;Christ and the
+Controversies of Christendom,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Holy Spirit and the
+Christian Ministry&rdquo; were remarkable for a keen insight into the
+conditions and demands of the age. For some years he edited
+the <i>Congregationalist</i>, a monthly magazine connected with the
+denomination. In 1877 he was appointed Lyman Beecher
+lecturer at Yale University, and visited America to deliver his
+&ldquo;Lectures on Preaching.&rdquo; At the International Council of
+Congregationalists, meeting in London in 1891, the first gathering
+of the kind, Dale was nominated for the presidency. He accepted
+the honour and delivered an address on &ldquo;The Divine Life in
+Man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As a theologian Dale occupied an influential position amongst
+the religious thinkers of the 19th century. He ably interpreted
+the Evangelical thought of his age, but his Evangelicalism was
+of a broad and progressive type. His chief contribution to constructive
+theological thought is his work <i>On The Atonement</i>, in
+which he contends that the death of Christ is the objective
+ground on which the sins of man were remitted. Among his
+other theological books are: <i>The Epistle to the Ephesians</i> (a
+series of expositions), <i>Christian Doctrine</i>, <i>The Living Christ and
+the Four Gospels</i>, <i>Fellowship with Christ</i>, <i>The Epistle to James</i>,
+and <i>The Ten Commandments</i>.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALE, SIR THOMAS<a name="ar24" id="ar24"></a></span> (d. 1619), British naval commander and
+colonial deputy-governor of Virginia. From about 1588 to 1609
+he was in the service of the Low Countries with the English army
+originally under Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester; in 1606, while
+visiting in England, he was knighted by King James; from 1611
+to 1616 he was actually though not always nominally in chief
+control of the province of Virginia either as deputy-governor or
+as &ldquo;high marshall,&rdquo; and he is best remembered for the energy
+and the extreme rigour of his administration there, which established
+order and in various ways seems to have benefited the
+colony; he himself declared that he left it &ldquo;in great prosperity
+and peace.&rdquo; Under him began the first real expansion of the
+colony with the establishment of the settlement of Henrico on
+and about what was later known as Farrar&rsquo;s Island; it was he
+who, about 1614, took the first step toward abolishing the communal
+system by the introduction of private holdings, and it was
+during his administration that the first code of laws of Virginia,
+nominally in force from 1610 to 1619, was effectively tested.
+This code, entitled &ldquo;Articles, Lawes, and Orders&mdash;Divine,
+Politique, and Martiall,&rdquo; but popularly known as Dale&rsquo;s Code,
+was notable for its pitiless severity, and seems to have been
+prepared in large part by Dale himself. He left Virginia in 1616
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page764" id="page764"></a>764</span>
+with the intention probably of returning to the service of the
+Low Countries, but instead was given command of an English
+fleet sent against the Dutch, defeated the enemy near Batavia
+in the East Indies late in the year 1618, arrived at Masulipatam
+in July 1619, and died there on the 9th of the following month.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>An account of Dale&rsquo;s career in Virginia is given in Alexander
+Brown&rsquo;s <i>The First Republic in America</i> (Boston, 1898); a scholarly
+discussion of &ldquo;Dale&rsquo;s Code&rdquo; by Walter F. Prince may be found in
+vol. i. of the <i>Annual Report of the American Historical Association</i> for
+1899 (Washington, D.C., 1900), and the code itself is reprinted in
+Peter Force&rsquo;s <i>Historical Tracts</i>, vol. iii., No. 11.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALECARLIA<a name="ar25" id="ar25"></a></span> (<i>Dalarne</i>, &ldquo;the Dales&rdquo;), a west midland region
+of Sweden, virtually coincident with the district (<i>län</i>) of Kopparberg,
+which extends from the mountains of the Norwegian
+frontier to within 25 m. of Gefle on the Baltic coast. It is a
+region full of historical associations, and possesses strong local
+characteristics in respect of its products, and especially of its
+people. The Dalecarlians or Dalesmen speak their own peculiar
+dialect, wear their own peculiar costumes, and are famed for
+their brave spirit and sturdy love of independence. In 1434,
+led by Engelbrecht, the miner, they rose against the oppressive
+tyranny of the officers of Eric XIV. of Denmark, and in 1519-1523
+it was among them that Gustavus Vasa found his staunchest
+supporters in his patriotic task of freeing Sweden from the yoke
+of the Danes. The districts around Lakes Runn and Siljan (&ldquo;the
+Eye of the Dales&rdquo;), the principal sheets of water in the valleys
+of the Dal rivers, are consequently classic ground. By the banks
+of Lake Runn, for example, is seen the barn in which Vasa
+threshed corn in disguise, when still a fugitive from the Danes.
+The people are for the most part small peasant proprietors.
+They eke out their scanty returns from tilling the soil by a
+variety of home industries, such as making scythes, saws, bells,
+wooden wares, hair goods, and so forth. About three quarters
+of the whole district is covered with forest. Besides the wealth
+of the forests, the Dales contain some of the largest and most
+prolific iron mines in Sweden, notably those of Grängesberg.
+Copper is mined at Falun (q.v.), the chief town of Kopparberg,
+and some silver and lead, zinc and sulphur is found. In consequence
+of this the district has numerous smelting furnaces,
+blasting and rolling mills, iron and metallurgical works, as well
+as saw-mills, wood-pulp factories, and chemical works.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See G. H. Mellin, <i>Skildringar af den Skandinaviska Nordens
+Folklif og Natur</i>, vol. iii. (1865); and Frederika Bremer, <i>I Dalarne</i>
+(1845), of which there is an English translation by William and Mary
+Howitt (1852). For the dialect, see a paper by A. Noreen, in <i>De
+Svenska Landsmålen</i>, vol. iv. (1881).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALGAIRNS, JOHN DOBREE<a name="ar26" id="ar26"></a></span> (1818-1876), English Roman
+Catholic priest, was born in Guernsey on the 21st of October
+1818. About the age of seventeen he entered Exeter College,
+Oxford, and soon after taking his degree he contributed a letter
+to Louis Veuillot&rsquo;s ultramontane organ <i>L&rsquo;Univers</i>, on &ldquo;Anglican
+Church Parties,&rdquo; which gave him considerable repute. Together
+with Mark Pattison and others, he translated the <i>Catena aurea</i>
+of St Thomas Aquinas, a commentary on the Gospels, taken
+from the works of the Fathers. He was a contributor to Newman&rsquo;s
+<i>Lives of the English Saints</i>, for which he wrote the beautiful
+studies on the Cistercian Saints. <i>The Life of St Stephen Harding</i>
+has been translated into several languages. Dalgairns became a
+Roman Catholic in 1845, and was ordained priest in the following
+year. He joined his friend John Henry Newman in Rome, and,
+together with him, entered the Congregation of the Oratory.
+On his return to England in 1848, he was attached to the London
+Oratory, where he laboured successfully as a priest, with the
+exception of three years spent in Birmingham. Dalgairns was a
+prominent member of the well-known &ldquo;Metaphysical Society.&rdquo;
+He died at Burgess Hill, near Brighton, on the 6th of April 1876.
+During the Catholic period of his life, Dalgairns wrote <i>The
+Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, with an Introduction on the
+History of Jansenism</i> (London 1853); <i>The German Mystics of
+the Fourteenth Century</i> (London, 1858); <i>The Holy Communion,
+its Philosophy, Theology and Practice</i> (Dublin, 1861).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>A list of his contributions on religious and philosophical subjects,
+to the reviews and periodicals, is given in J. Gillow&rsquo;s <i>Bibliographical
+Dictionary of English Catholics</i>, vol. ii.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALGARNO, GEORGE<a name="ar27" id="ar27"></a></span> (<i>c.</i> 1626-1687), English writer, was
+born at Old Aberdeen about 1626. He appears to have studied
+at Marischal College; but he finally settled in Oxford, where,
+according to Wood, &ldquo;he taught a private grammar-school with
+good success for about thirty years,&rdquo; and where he died on the
+28th of August 1687. He was master of Elizabeth school,
+Guernsey, for some ten years, but resigned in 1672. In his work
+entitled <i>Didascalocophus, or the Deaf and Dumb Man&rsquo;s Tutor</i>
+(Oxford, 1680), he explained, for the first time, the hand alphabet
+for the deaf and dumb, though he does not claim to have invented
+this method of communication. Twenty years before the publication
+of his <i>Didascalocophus</i>, Dalgarno had given to the world
+a very ingenious piece entitled <i>Ars Signorum</i> (1661), dividing
+ideas into seventeen classes, to be represented by the letters
+of the Latin alphabet with the addition of two Greek characters.
+Among the Sloane manuscripts are several tracts by Dalgarno,
+further elucidating his system of universal shorthand. Leibnitz
+on various occasions alluded to the <i>Ars signorum</i> in commendatory
+terms.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The chief works of Dalgarno were reprinted (1834) for the Maitland
+Club.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALHOUSIE, JAMES ANDREW BROUN RAMSAY,<a name="ar28" id="ar28"></a></span> <span class="sc">1st
+Marquess</span> and <span class="sc">10th Earl of</span> (1812-1860), British statesman and
+Indian administrator, was born at Dalhousie Castle, Scotland, on
+the 22nd of April 1812. He crowded into his short life conspicuous
+public services in England, and established an unrivalled position
+among the master-builders of the Indian empire. Denounced
+on the eve of his death as the chief offender who failed to notice
+the signs of the mutiny of 1857, and even aggravated the crisis
+by his overbearing self-consciousness, centralizing activity and
+reckless annexations, he stands out in the clear light of history
+as the far-sighted governor-general who consolidated British
+rule in India, laid truly the foundations of its later administration,
+and by his sound policy enabled his successors to stem
+the tide of rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>He was the third son of George Ramsay, 9th earl of Dalhousie
+(1770-1838), one of Wellington&rsquo;s generals, who, after holding
+the highest offices in Canada, became commander-in-chief in
+India, and of his wife Christina Broun of Coalstoun, a lady of
+noble lineage and distinguished gifts. From his father he inherited
+a vigorous self-reliance and a family pride which urged
+him to prove worthy of the Ramsays who had &ldquo;not crawled
+through seven centuries of their country&rsquo;s history,&rdquo; while to his
+mother he owed his high-bred courtesy and his deeply seated
+reverence for religion. The Ramsays of Dalhousie (or Dalwolsie)
+in Midlothian were a branch of the main line of Scottish Ramsays,
+of whom the earliest known is Simon de Ramsay, of Huntingdon,
+England, mentioned in 1140 as the grantee of lands in West
+Lothian at the hands of David I. A Sir William de Ramsay
+of Dalhousie swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296, but is famous for
+having in 1320 signed the letter to the pope asserting the independence
+of Scotland; and his supposed son, Sir Alexander
+Ramsay (d. 1342), was the Scottish patriot and capturer of
+Roxburgh Castle (1342), who, having been made warder of the
+castle and sheriff of Teviotdale by David II., was soon afterwards
+carried off and starved to death by his predecessor, the Douglas,
+in revenge. Sir John Ramsay of Dalhousie (1580-1626),
+James VI.&rsquo;s favourite, is famous for rescuing the king in the
+Gowrie conspiracy, and was created (1606) Viscount Haddington
+and Lord Ramsay of Barns (subsequently baron of Kingston
+and earl of Holderness in England). The barony of Ramsay of
+Melrose was granted in 1618 to his brother George Ramsay of
+Dalhousie (d. 1629), whose son William Ramsay (d. 1674) was
+made 1st earl of Dalhousie in 1633.</p>
+
+<p>The 9th earl was in 1815 created Baron Dalhousie in the
+peerage of the United Kingdom, and had three sons, the two
+elder of whom died early. His youngest son, the subject of this
+article, was small in stature, but his firm chiselled mouth, high
+forehead and masterful manner intimated a dignity that none
+could overlook. Yet his early life gave little promise of the
+dominating force of his character or of his ability to rise to the
+full height of his splendid opportunities. Nor did those brought
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page765" id="page765"></a>765</span>
+into closest intimacy with him, whether at school or at Oxford,
+suspect the higher qualities of statesmanship which afterwards
+established his fame on so firm a foundation.</p>
+
+<p>Several years of his early boyhood were spent with his father
+and mother in Canada, reminiscences of which were still vivid
+with him when governor-general of India. Returning to Scotland
+he was prepared for Harrow, where he entered in 1825. Two
+years later he was removed from school, his entire education
+being entrusted to the Rev. Mr Temple, incumbent of a quiet
+parish in Staffordshire. To this gentleman he referred in later
+days as having taught him all he knew, and to his training he
+must have owed those habits of regularity and that indomitable
+industry which marked his adult life. In October 1829 he passed
+on to Christ Church, Oxford, where he worked fairly hard, won
+some distinction, and made many lifelong friends. His studies,
+however, were so greatly interrupted by the protracted illness
+and death in 1832 of his only surviving brother, that Lord
+Ramsay, as he then became, had to content himself with entering
+for a &ldquo;pass&rdquo; degree, though the examiners marked their
+appreciation of his work by placing him in the fourth class of
+honours for Michaelmas 1833. He then travelled in Italy and
+Switzerland, enriching with copious entries the diary which
+he religiously kept up through life, and storing his mind with
+valuable observations.</p>
+
+<p>An unsuccessful but courageous contest at the general election
+in 1835 for one of the seats in parliament for Edinburgh,
+fought against such veterans as the future speaker, James
+Abercrombie, afterwards Lord Dunfermline, and John Campbell,
+future lord chancellor, was followed in 1837 by Ramsay&rsquo;s
+return to the House of Commons as member for East Lothian.
+In the previous year he had married Lady Susan Hay, daughter
+of the marquess of Tweeddale, whose companionship was his
+chief support in India, and whose death in 1853 left him a
+heartbroken man. In 1838 his father had died after a long
+illness, while less than a year later he lost his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Succeeding to the peerage, the new earl soon made his mark
+in a speech delivered on the 16th of June 1840 in support of Lord
+Aberdeen&rsquo;s Church of Scotland Benefices Bill, a controversy
+arising out of the Auchterarder case, in which he had already
+taken part in the &ldquo;general assembly&rdquo; in opposition to Dr
+Chalmers. In May 1843 he became vice-president of the board
+of trade, Gladstone being president, and was sworn in as a
+member of the privy council. Succeeding Gladstone as president
+in 1845, he threw himself into the work during the crisis of the
+railway mania with such energy that his health partially broke
+down under the strain. In the struggle over the corn laws
+he ranged himself on the side of Sir Robert Peel, and after the
+failure of Lord John Russell to form a ministry he resumed
+his post at the board of trade, entering the cabinet on the retirement
+of Lord Stanley. When Peel resigned office in June 1846,
+Lord John offered Dalhousie a seat in the cabinet, an offer
+which he declined from a fear that acceptance might &ldquo;involve
+the loss of public character.&rdquo; Another attempt to secure his
+services in the appointment of president of the railway board
+was equally unsuccessful; but in 1847 he accepted the post of
+governor-general of India in succession to Lord Hardinge, on
+the understanding that he was to be left in &ldquo;entire and unquestioned
+possession&rdquo; of his own &ldquo;personal independence
+with reference to party politics.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dalhousie assumed charge of his dual duties as governor-general
+of India and governor of Bengal on the 12th of January
+1848, and shortly afterwards he was honoured with the green
+ribbon of the Order of the Thistle. In writing to the president
+of the board of control, Sir John Hobhouse, he was able to assure
+him that everything was quiet. This statement, however, was
+to be falsified by events almost before it could reach England.
+For on the 19th of April Vans Agnew of the civil service and
+Lieutenant Anderson of the Bombay European regiment, having
+been sent to take charge of Multan from Diwan Mulraj, were
+murdered there, and within a short time the Sikh troops and
+sardars joined in open rebellion. Dalhousie agreed with Sir
+Hugh Gough, the commander-in-chief, that the Company&rsquo;s
+military forces were neither adequately equipped with transport
+and supplies, nor otherwise prepared to take the field immediately.
+He also foresaw the spread of the rebellion, and the
+necessity that must arise, not merely for the capture of Multan,
+but also for the entire subjugation of the Punjab. He therefore
+resolutely delayed to strike, organized a strong army for operations
+in November, and himself proceeded to the Punjab. Despite
+the brilliant successes gained by Herbert Edwardes in conflict
+with Mulraj, and Goagh&rsquo;s indecisive victories at Ramnagar
+in November, at Sadulapur in December, and at Chillianwalla
+in the following month, the stubborn resistance at Multan
+showed that the task required the utmost resources of the
+government. At length, on the 22nd of January 1849, the
+Multan fortress was taken by General Whish, who was thus set
+at liberty to join Gough at Gujrat. Here a complete victory
+was won on the 21st of February, the Sikh army surrendered
+at Rawal Pindi, and their Afghan allies were chased out of India.
+For his services the earl of Dalhousie received the thanks of
+parliament and a step in the peerage, as marquess.</p>
+
+<p>The war being now over, Dalhousie, without waiting for
+instructions from home, annexed the Punjab, and made provision
+for the custody and education of the infant maharaja. For the
+present the province was administered by a triumvirate under
+the personal supervision of the governor-general, and later, a
+place having been found for Henry Lawrence in Rajputana, by
+John Lawrence as sole commissioner. Twice did Dalhousie tour
+through its length and breadth, settling on the spot all matters
+of importance, and when he left India no province could show a
+better record of progress.</p>
+
+<p>One further addition to the empire was made by conquest.
+The arrogant Burmese court at Ava was bound by the treaty of
+Yandabo, 1826, to protect British ships in Burmese waters, but
+the outrageous conduct of the governor of Rangoon towards the
+masters of the &ldquo;Monarch&rdquo; and &ldquo;Champion&rdquo; met with no
+redress from the king. Dalhousie adopted the maxim of Lord
+Wellesley &ldquo;that an insult offered to the British flag at the
+mouth of the Ganges should be resented as promptly and fully
+as an insult offered at the mouth of the Thames&rdquo;; but, anxious
+to save the cost of war, he tried to settle the dispute by diplomacy.
+When that failed he made vigorous preparation for the campaign
+to be undertaken in the autumn, giving his attention to the
+adequate provision of rations, boat transport, and medical
+supplies, composing differences between the military contingents
+from Bengal and Madras, and between the military and naval
+forces employed, and conferring with General Godwin whom he
+had chosen to command the expedition. Martaban was taken on
+the 5th of April 1852, and Rangoon and Bassein shortly afterwards.
+Since, however, the court of Ava showed no sign of
+submission, the second campaign opened in October, and after
+the capture of Prome and Pegu the annexation of the province
+of Pegu was declared by a proclamation dated the 20th of
+December 1853. To any further invasion of the Burmese empire
+Dalhousie was firmly opposed, being content to &ldquo;consolidate&rdquo;
+the Company&rsquo;s possessions by uniting Arakan to Tenasserim.
+By his wise policy he pacified the new province, placing Colonel
+Arthur Phayre in sole charge of it, personally visiting it, and
+establishing a complete system of telegraphs and communications.</p>
+
+<p>These military operations added force to the conviction which
+Dalhousie had formed of the need of consolidating the Company&rsquo;s
+ill-knit possessions, and as a step in that direction he decided to
+apply the doctrine of &ldquo;lapse,&rdquo; and annex any Hindu native
+states, created or revived by the grants of the British government,
+in which there was a failure of male lineal descendants, reserving
+for consideration the policy of permitting adoptions in other
+Hindu chiefships tributary and subordinate to the British government
+as paramount. Under the first head he recommended the
+annexation of Satara in January 1849, of Jaitpur and Sambalpur
+in the same year, and of Jhansi and Nagpur in 1853. In these
+cases his action was approved by the home authorities, but his
+proposal to annex Karauli in 1849 was disallowed, while Baghat
+and the petty estate of Udaipur, which he had annexed in 1851
+and 1852 respectively, were afterwards restored to native rule.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page766" id="page766"></a>766</span></p>
+
+<p>Other measures with the same object were carried out in the
+Company&rsquo;s own territories. Bengal, too long ruled by the
+governor-general or his delegate, was placed under a separate
+lieutenant-governor in May 1854; a department of public works
+was established in each presidency, and engineering colleges
+were provided. An imperial system of telegraphs followed;
+the first link of railway communication was completed in 1855;
+well-considered plans mapped out the course of other lines and
+their method of administration; the Ganges canal, which then
+exceeded &ldquo;all the irrigation lines of Lombardy and Egypt
+together,&rdquo; was completed; and despite the cost of wars in the
+Punjab and Burma, liberal provision was made for metalled
+roads and bridges. The useless military boards were swept
+away; selection took the place of seniority in the higher commands;
+an army clothing and a stud department were
+created, and the medical service underwent complete reorganization.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Unity of authority coupled with direct responsibility&rdquo; was
+the keynote of his policy. In nine masterly minutes he suggested
+means for strengthening the Company&rsquo;s European forces, calling
+attention to the dangers that threatened the English community,
+&ldquo;a handful of scattered strangers&rdquo;; but beyond the additional
+powers of recruitment which at his entreaty were granted in the
+last charter act of 1853, his proposals were shelved by the home
+authorities, who scented no danger and wished to avoid expense.
+In his administration Dalhousie vigorously asserted the control
+of the civil government over military affairs, and when Sir
+Charles Napier ordered certain allowances, given as compensation
+for the dearness of provisions, to be granted to the sepoys on a
+system which had not been sanctioned from headquarters, and
+threatened to repeat the offence, the governor-general found it
+necessary to administer such a rebuke that the hot-headed soldier
+resigned his command.</p>
+
+<p>Dalhousie&rsquo;s reforms were not confined to the departments of
+public works and military affairs. He created an imperial
+system of post-offices, reducing the rates of carrying letters and
+introducing postage stamps. To him India owes the first
+department of public instruction; it was he who placed the
+gaols under proper inspection, abolishing the practice of branding
+convicts; put down the crime of <i>meriahs</i> or human sacrifices;
+freed converts to other religions from the loss of their civil
+rights; inaugurated the system of administrative reports; and
+enlarged and dignified the legislative council of India. His wide
+interest in everything that concerned the welfare of the country
+was shown in the encouragement he gave to the culture of tea,
+in his protection of forests, in the preservation of ancient and
+historic monuments. With the object of improving civil administration,
+he closed the useless college in Calcutta for the
+education of young civilians, establishing in its place a proper
+system of training them in <i>mufasal</i> stations, and subjecting
+them to departmental examinations. He was equally careful of
+the well-being of the European soldier, providing him with
+healthy recreations and public gardens. To the civil service he
+gave improved leave and pension rules, while he purified its <i>moral</i>
+by forbidding all share in trading concerns, by vigorously
+punishing insolvents, and by his personal example of careful
+selection in the matter of patronage. As a comprehensive view
+of the constitution of the Indian government, dealing with the
+functions of its various members and the different parts of the
+official machinery, nothing could be more masterly than his
+minute of the 13th of October 1852. Indeed no governor-general
+ever penned a larger number of weighty papers dealing with
+public affairs in India. Even after laying down office and while
+on his way home, he forced himself, ill as he was, to review his
+own administration in a document of such importance that the
+House of Commons gave orders for its being printed (Blue Book
+245 of 1856).</p>
+
+<p>His foreign policy was guided by a desire to recognize the
+&ldquo;independence&rdquo; of the larger native states, and to avoid
+extending the political relations of his government with foreign
+powers outside India. Pressed to intervene in Hyderabad, he
+refused to do so, laying down the doctrine that interference was
+only justified &ldquo;if the administration of native princes tends
+unquestionably to the injury of the subjects or of the allies of
+the British government.&rdquo; Protection in his view carried no
+right of interference in the affairs of what he called &ldquo;independent&rdquo;
+states. In this spirit he negotiated in 1853 a treaty with
+the nizam, which provided funds for the maintenance of the
+contingent kept up by the British in support of that prince&rsquo;s
+authority, by the assignment of the Berars in lieu of annual
+payments of the cost and large outstanding arrears. &ldquo;The
+Berar treaty,&rdquo; he told Sir Charles Wood, &ldquo;is more likely to keep
+the nizam on his throne than anything that has happened for
+fifty years to him,&rdquo; while at the same time the control thus
+acquired over a strip of territory intervening between Bombay
+and Nagpur promoted his policy of consolidation and his schemes
+of railway extension. The same spirit induced him to tolerate a
+war of succession in Bahawalpur, so long as the contending
+candidates did not violate British territory. This reluctance to
+increase his responsibilities further caused him to refrain from
+punishing Dost Mahommed for the part he had taken in the Sikh
+War, and resolutely to refuse to enter upon any negotiations until
+the amir himself came forward. Then he steered a middle course
+between the proposals of his own agent, Herbert Edwardes,
+who advocated an offensive alliance, and those of John Lawrence,
+who would have avoided any sort of engagement. He himself
+drafted the short treaty of peace and friendship which Lawrence
+signed in 1855, that officer receiving in 1856 the order of K.C.B,
+in acknowledgment of his services in the matter. While, however,
+Dalhousie was content with a mutual engagement with the
+Afghan chief, binding each party to respect the territories of the
+other, he saw that a larger measure of interference was needed
+in Baluchistan, and with the khan of Kalat he authorized Major
+Jacob to negotiate a treaty of subordinate co-operation on the
+14th of May 1854. The khan was guaranteed an annual subsidy
+of Rs. 50,000, in return for the treaty which &ldquo;bound him to us
+wholly and exclusively.&rdquo; To this the home authorities demurred,
+but the engagement was duly ratified, and the subsidy was
+largely increased by Dalhousie&rsquo;s successors. On the other hand,
+he insisted on leaving all matters concerning Persia and Central
+Asia to the decision of the queen&rsquo;s advisers. The frontier tribesmen
+it was obviously necessary to coerce into good behaviour
+after the annexation of the Punjab. &ldquo;The hillmen,&rdquo; he wrote,
+&ldquo;regard the plains as their food and prey,&rdquo; and the Afridis,
+Mohmands, Black Mountain tribes, Waziris and others had to
+be taught that their new neighbours would not tolerate outrages.
+But he proclaimed to one and all his desire for peace, and urged
+upon them the duty of tribal responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>The settlement of the Oudh question was reserved to the last.
+The home authorities had begged Dalhousie to prolong his tenure
+of office during the Crimean War, but the difficulties of the
+problem no less than complications elsewhere had induced him
+to delay operations. In 1854 he appointed Outram as resident
+at the court of Lucknow, directing him to submit a report on
+the condition of the province. This was furnished in March
+1855. But though the state of disorder and misrule revealed
+by it called for prompt remedy, Dalhousie, looking at the treaty
+of 1801, considered that he was bound to proceed in the matter
+of reform with the king&rsquo;s consent. He proposed, therefore, to
+demand a transfer to the Company of the entire administration,
+the king merely retaining his royal rank, certain privileges in
+the courts, and a liberal allowance. If he should refuse this
+arrangement, a general rising was almost certain to follow, and
+then the British government would of necessity intervene on its
+own terms. On the 21st of November 1855 the court of directors
+instructed Dalhousie to assume the powers essential to the
+permanence of good government in Oudh, and to give the king
+no option unless he was sure that his majesty would surrender
+the administration rather than risk a revolution. Dalhousie
+was in wretched health and on the eve of retirement when the
+belated orders reached him; but he at once laid down instructions
+for Outram in every detail, moved up troops, and elaborated
+a scheme of government with particular orders as to conciliating
+local opinion. The king refused to sign the treaty put before
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page767" id="page767"></a>767</span>
+him, and a proclamation annexing the province was therefore
+issued on the 13th of February 1856.</p>
+
+<p>Only one important matter now remained to him before
+quitting office. The insurrection of the half-civilized Kolarian
+Santals of Bengal against the extortions of landlords and money-lenders
+had been severely repressed, but the causes of the insurrection
+had still to be reviewed and a remedy provided. By
+removing the tract of country from the ordinary regulations,
+enforcing the residence of British officers there, and employing
+the Santal headmen in a local police, he ensured a system of
+administration which afterwards proved eminently successful.</p>
+
+<p>At length, after seven years of strenuous labour, Dalhousie,
+on the 6th of March 1856, set sail for England on board the
+Company&rsquo;s &ldquo;Firoze,&rdquo; an object of general sympathy and not
+less general respect. At Alexandria he was carried by H.M.S.
+&ldquo;Caradoc&rdquo; to Malta, and thence by the &ldquo;Tribune&rdquo; to Spithead,
+which he reached on the 13th of May. His return had been
+eagerly looked for by statesmen who hoped that he would
+resume his public career, by the Company which voted him an
+annual pension of £5000, by public bodies which showered upon
+him every mark of respect, and by the queen who earnestly
+prayed for the &ldquo;blessing of restored health and strength.&rdquo;
+That blessing was not to be his. He lingered on, seeking sunshine
+in Malta and medical treatment at Malvern, Edinburgh and other
+places in vain obedience to his doctors. The outbreak of the
+mutiny led to bitter attacks at home upon his policy, and to
+strange misrepresentation of his public acts, while on the other
+hand John Lawrence invoked his counsel and influence, and
+those who really knew his work in India cried out, &ldquo;Oh, for a
+dictator,&rdquo; and his return &ldquo;for one hour!&rdquo; To all these cries
+he turned a deaf ear, refusing to embarrass those who were
+responsible by any expressions of opinion, declining to undertake
+his own defence or to assist in his vindication through the public
+press, and by his last directions sealing up his private journal
+and papers of personal interest against publication until fifty
+years after his death. On the 9th of August 1859 his youngest
+daughter, Edith, was married at Dalhousie Castle to Sir James
+Fergusson, Bart. In the same castle Dalhousie died on the 19th
+of December 1860; he was buried in the old churchyard of
+Cockpen.</p>
+
+<p>Dalhousie&rsquo;s family consisted of two daughters, and the
+marquessate became extinct at his death.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The detailed events of the period will be found in Sir William
+Lee-Warner&rsquo;s <i>Life of the Marquis of Dalhousie, K.T.</i>; Sir E. Arnold&rsquo;s
+<i>Dalhousie&rsquo;s Administration of British India</i>; Sir C. Jackson&rsquo;s <i>Vindication
+of Dalhousie&rsquo;s Indian Administration</i>; Sir W. W. Hunter&rsquo;s
+<i>Dalhousie</i>; Capt. L. J. Trotter&rsquo;s <i>Life of the Marquis of Dalhousie</i>;
+the duke of Argyll&rsquo;s <i>India under Dalhousie and Canning</i>; Broughton
+MSS. (British Museum); and parliamentary papers.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. L.-W.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALHOUSIE, FOX MAULE RAMSAY,<a name="ar29" id="ar29"></a></span> 11th <span class="sc">Earl ot</span> (1801-1874),
+was the eldest son of William Ramsay Maule, 1st Baron
+Panmure (1771-1852), and a grandson of George, 8th earl of
+Dalhousie. Born on the 22nd of April 1801 and christened Fox
+as a compliment to the great Whig, he served for a term in the
+army, and then in 1835 entered the House of Commons as member
+for Perthshire. In Lord Melbourne&rsquo;s ministry (1835-1841)
+Maule was under-secretary for home affairs, and under Lord
+John Russell he was secretary-at-war from July 1846 to January
+1852, when for two or three weeks he was president of the board
+of control. In April 1852 he became the 2nd Baron Panmure,
+and early in 1855 he joined Lord Palmerston&rsquo;s cabinet, filling
+the new office of secretary of state for war. Panmure held this
+office until February 1858, being at the war office during the
+concluding period of the Crimean War and having to meet a
+good deal of criticism, some of which was justified and some of
+which was not. In December 1860 he succeeded his kinsman,
+the marquess of Dalhousie, as 11th earl of Dalhousie, and he died
+childless on the 6th of July 1874. Always interested in church
+matters, Dalhousie was a prominent supporter of the Free Church
+of Scotland after the disruption of 1843. On his death the barony
+became extinct, but his earldom passed to his cousin, George
+Ramsay (1806-1880), an admiral who, in 1875, was created a
+peer of the United Kingdom as Baron Ramsay. George&rsquo;s
+grandson, Arthur George Maule Ramsay (b. 1878), became the
+14th earl in 1887.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See the <i>Panmure Papers</i>, a selection from Panmure&rsquo;s correspondence,
+edited in two volumes (1908), by Sir G. Douglas, Bart., and
+Sir G. D. Ramsay. These numerous letters throw much light on
+the concluding stage of the Crimean War.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALIN, OLOF VON<a name="ar30" id="ar30"></a></span> (1708-1763), Swedish poet, was born on
+the 29th of August 1708 in the parish of Vinberg in Halland,
+where his father was the minister. He was nearly related to
+Rydelius, the philosophical bishop of Lund, and he was sent at
+a very early age to be instructed by him, Linnaeus being one of
+his fellow-pupils. While studying at Lund, Dalin had visited
+Stockholm in the year 1723, and in 1726 entered one of the public
+offices there. Under the patronage of Baron Rålamb he rapidly
+rose to preferment, and his skill and intelligence won him golden
+opinions. In 1733 he started the weekly <i>Svenska Argus</i>, on the
+model of Addison&rsquo;s <i>Spectator</i>, writing anonymously till 1736.
+His next work was <i>Tankar öfver Critiquer</i> (Thoughts about
+Critics, 1736). With the avowed purpose of enlarging the horizon
+of his cultivation and tastes, Dalin set off, in company with his
+pupil, Baron Rålamb&rsquo;s son, on a tour through Germany and
+France, in 1739-1740. On his return the shifting of political
+life at home caused him to write his famous satiric allegories of
+<i>The Story of the Horse</i> and <i>Aprilverk</i> (1738), which were very
+popular and provoked countless imitations. His didactic epos
+of <i>Svenska Friheten</i> (Swedish Liberty) appeared in 1742.
+Hitherto Addison and Pope had been his models; in this work
+he draws his inspiration from Thomson, whose poem of <i>Liberty</i>
+it emulated. On the accession of Adolphus Freduck in 1751
+Dalin received the post of tutor to the crown prince, afterwards
+Gustavus III. He had enjoyed the confidence of Queen Louisa
+Ulrika, sister of Frederick the Great of Germany, while she was
+crown princess, and she now made him secretary of the Swedish
+academy of literature, founded by her in 1753. His position
+at court involved him in the queen&rsquo;s political intrigues, and
+separated him to a vexatious degree from the studies in which
+he had hitherto been absorbed. He held the post of tutor to
+the crown prince until 1756, when he was arrested on suspicion
+of having taken part in the attempted <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i> of that year,
+and was tried for his life before the diet. He was acquitted, but
+was forbidden on any pretence to show himself at court. This
+period of exile, which lasted until 1761, Dalin spent in the
+preparation of the third volume of his great historical work, the
+<i>Svea Rikes historia</i> (History of the Swedish Kingdom), which
+came down to the death of Charles IX. in 1611. The first two
+volumes appeared in 1746-1750; the third, in two parts, in
+1760-1762. Dalin had been ennobled in 1751, and made privy
+councillor in 1753; and now, in 1761, he once more took his
+place at court. During his exile, however, his spirit and his
+health had been broken; in a fit of panic he had destroyed some
+packets of his best unpublished works and this he constantly
+brooded over. On the 12th of August 1763 he died at his house
+in Drottningholm. In the year 1767 his writings in <i>belles lettres</i>
+were issued in six volumes, edited by J. C. Bökman, his half-brother.
+Amid an enormous mass of occasional verses, anagrams,
+epigrams, impromptus and the like, his satires and
+serious poems were almost buried. But some of these former,
+even, are found to be songs of remarkable grace and delicacy,
+and many display a love of natural scenery and a knowledge of
+its forms truly remarkable in that artificial age. His dramas
+also are of interest, particularly his admirable comedy of <i>Den
+afvundsjuke</i> (The Envious Man, 1738); he also wrote a tragedy,
+<i>Brynilda</i> (1739), and a pastoral in three scenes on King Adolphus
+Frederick&rsquo;s return from Finland. During the early part of his
+life he was universally admitted to be <i>facile princeps</i> among the
+Swedish poets of his time.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See also K. Warburg, &ldquo;Olof von Dalin,&rdquo; in the <i>Handlingar</i> (vol.
+lix., 1884) of the Swedish Academy. A selection of his works was
+edited by E. V. Lindblad (Örebro, 1872).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALKEITH,<a name="ar31" id="ar31"></a></span> a municipal and police burgh of Edinburghshire,
+Scotland, lying between the North and South Esk, 7½ m. S.E.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page768" id="page768"></a>768</span>
+of Edinburgh, by the North British railway. Pop. (1891) 7035;
+(1901) 6812. It is an important agricultural centre, and has
+every week one of the largest grain-markets in Scotland. Besides
+milling, brewing and tanning, the chief industries are the making
+of carpets, brushes and bricks, and iron and brass founding.
+Near Eskbank, a handsome residential quarter with a railway
+station, coal-mining is carried on. Market-gardening, owing to
+the proximity of the capital, flourishes. The parish church&mdash;an
+old Gothic edifice, which was originally the Castle chapel, and
+was restored in 1852&mdash;the municipal buildings, corn exchange,
+Foresters&rsquo; hall and Newmills hospital are among the principal
+public buildings. Dalkeith was the birthplace of Professor
+Peter Guthrie Tait, the mathematician (1831-1901). Dalkeith
+Palace, a seat of the duke of Buccleuch, was designed by Sir
+John Vanbrugh in 1700 for the widow of the duke of Monmouth,
+countess of Buccleuch in her own right. It occupies the site of
+a castle which belonged first to the Grahams and afterwards to
+the Douglases, and was sold in 1642 by William, seventh or
+eighth earl of Morton, to Francis, second earl of Buccleuch,
+for the purpose of raising money to assist Charles I. in the Civil
+War. The palace has been the residence of several sovereigns
+during their visits to Edinburgh, among them George IV.
+in 1822, Queen Victoria in 1842, and Edward VII. in 1903.
+The picture gallery possesses important examples of the Old
+Masters; the gardens are renowned for their fruit and flowers;
+and the beautiful park of over 1000 acres&mdash;containing a remnant
+of the Caledonian Forest, with oaks, beeches and ashes of great
+girth and height&mdash;is watered by the North and South Esk,
+which unite before they leave the policy. About 1 m. south is
+Newbattle Abbey, the seat of the marquess of Lothian, delightfully
+situated on the South Esk. It is built on the site of an
+abbey founded by David I., the ancient crypt being incorporated
+in the mansion. The library contains many valuable books and
+illuminated MSS., and excellent pictures and carvings. In the
+park are several remarkable trees, among them one of the
+largest beeches in the United Kingdom. Two miles still farther
+south lies Cockpen, immortalized by the Baroness Nairne&rsquo;s
+humorous song &ldquo;The Laird of Cockpen,&rdquo; and Dalhousie Castle,
+partly ancient and partly modern, which gives a title to the
+earls of Dalhousie. About 6 m. south-east of Dalkeith are
+Borthwick and Crichton castles, 1 m. apart, both now in ruins.
+Queen Mary spent three weeks in Borthwick Castle, as in durance
+vile, after her marriage with Bothwell, and fled from it to Dunbar
+in the guise of a page. The castle, which is a double tower,
+was besieged by Cromwell, and the marks of his cannon-balls
+are still visible. In the manse of the parish of Borthwick, William
+Robertson, the historian, was born in 1721. About 4 m. west of
+Dalkeith is the village of Burdiehouse, the limestone quarries
+of which are famous for fossils. The name is said to be a corruption
+of Bordeaux House, which was bestowed on it by Queen
+Mary&rsquo;s French servants, who lived here when their mistress
+resided at Craigmillar.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALKEY,<a name="ar32" id="ar32"></a></span> a small port and watering-place of Co. Dublin,
+Ireland, in the south parliamentary division; 9 m. S.E. of
+Dublin by the Dublin &amp; South-Eastern railway. Pop. of urban
+district (1901), 3398. It is pleasantly situated on and about
+Sorrento Point, the southern horn of Dublin Bay. Dalkey
+Island, lying off the town, has an ancient ruined chapel, of the
+history of which nothing is certainly known, and a disused
+battery, which protected the harbour, a landing-place of some
+former importance. A castle in the town, of the 15th century,
+is restored to use as offices for the urban district council. There
+are also ruins of an old church, the dedication of which, like
+the island chapel, is ascribed to one St Begnet, perhaps a diminutive
+form of Bega, but the identity is not clear. Until the close
+of the 18th century Dalkey was notorious for the burlesque
+election of a &ldquo;king,&rdquo; a mock ceremony which became invested
+with a certain political importance.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLAS, ALEXANDER JAMES<a name="ar33" id="ar33"></a></span> (1759-1817), American
+statesman and financier, was born on the island of Jamaica,
+West Indies, on the 21st of June 1759, the son of Dr Robert C.
+Dallas (d. 1774), a Scottish physician then practising there.
+Dr Dallas soon returned to England with his family, and
+Alexander was educated at Edinburgh and Westminster. He
+studied law for a time in the Inner Temple, and in 1780 returned
+to Jamaica. There he met the younger Lewis Hallam (1738-1808),
+a pioneer American theatrical manager and actor, who
+induced him to remove to the United States, and in 1783 he
+settled in Philadelphia, where he at once took the oath of
+allegiance to the United States, was admitted to practise law
+in 1785, and rapidly attained a prominent position at the bar.
+He was interested in the theatrical projects of Hallam, for whom
+he wrote several dramatic compositions, and from 1787 to 1789
+he edited <i>The Columbian Magazine</i>. From 1791 to 1801 he
+was secretary of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Partly
+owing to his publication of an able pamphlet against the Jay
+treaty in 1795, he soon acquired a position of much influence
+in the Democratic-Republican party in the state. During the
+Whisky Insurrection he was paymaster-general of the state
+militia. His official position as secretary did not entirely
+prevent him from continuing his private law practice, and, with
+Jared Ingersoll, he was the counsel of Senator William Blount
+in his impeachment trial. Dallas was United States attorney
+for the eastern district of Pennsylvania from 1801 until 1814,
+a period marked by bitter struggles between the Democratic-Republican
+factions in the state, in which he took a leading
+part in alliance with Governor Thomas M&rsquo;Kean and Albert
+Gallatin, and in opposition to the radical factions led by Michael
+Leib (1759-1822) and William Duane (1760-1835), of the <i>Aurora</i>.
+The quarrel led in 1805 to the M&rsquo;Kean party seeking Federalist
+support. By such an alliance, largely due to the political
+ingenuity of Dallas, M&rsquo;Kean was re-elected. In October 1814
+President Madison appointed Dallas secretary of the treasury,
+to succeed George W. Campbell (1768-1848), whose brief and
+disastrous term had been marked by wholesale bank suspensions,
+and an enormous depreciation of state and national bank notes.
+The appointment itself inspired confidence, and Dallas&rsquo;s prompt
+measures still further relieved the situation. He first issued
+new interest-bearing treasury notes of small denominations,
+and in addition proposed the re-establishment of a national
+bank, by which means he expected to increase the stability
+and uniformity of the circulating medium, and furnish the government
+with a powerful engine in the upholding of its credit.
+In spite of his already onerous duties, Dallas, with characteristic
+energy, served also as secretary of war <i>ad interim</i> from March
+to August 1815, and in this capacity successfully reorganized
+the army on a peace footing. Although peace brought a more
+favourable condition of the money market, Dallas&rsquo;s attempt to
+fund the treasury notes on a satisfactory basis was unsuccessful,
+but a bill, reported by Calhoun, as chairman of the committee
+on national currency, for the establishment of a national bank,
+became law on the 10th of April 1816. Meanwhile (12th of
+February 1816) Dallas, in a notable report, recommended a
+protective tariff, which was enacted late in April, largely in
+accordance with his recommendation. Although Dallas left
+the cabinet in October 1816, it was through his efforts that the
+new bank began its operations in the following January, and
+specie payments were resumed in February. Dallas, who
+belonged to the financial school of Albert Gallatin, deserves
+to rank among America&rsquo;s greatest financiers. He found the
+government bankrupt, and after two years at the head of the
+treasury he left it with a surplus of $20,000,000; moreover, as
+Henry Adams points out, his measures had &ldquo;fixed the financial
+system in a firm groove for twenty years.&rdquo; He retired from
+office to resume his practice of the law, but the burden of his
+official duties had undermined his health, and he died suddenly
+at Philadelphia on the 16th of June 1817. He was the author
+of several notable political pamphlets and state papers, and in
+addition edited <i>The Laws of Pennsylvania, 1700-1801</i> (1801),
+and <i>Reports of Cases ruled and adjudged by the Courts of the
+United States and of Pennsylvania before and since the Revolution</i>
+(4 vols., 1790-1807; new edition with notes by Thomas J.
+Wharton, 1830). He wrote <i>An Exposition of the Causes and
+Character of the War of 1812-15</i> (1815), which was republished
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page769" id="page769"></a>769</span>
+by government authority in New York and London and widely
+circulated. He left in MS. an unfinished <i>History of Pennsylvania</i>.</p>
+
+<p>His brother, <span class="sc">Robert Charles Dallas</span> (1754-1824), was born
+in Jamaica, and lived at various times in the West Indies, the
+United States, England and France. He was an intimate
+friend of Lord Byron. He wrote <i>Recollections of Lord Byron</i>
+(1824), and several novels, plays and miscellaneous works.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See G. M. Dallas, <i>Life and Writings of Alexander James Dallas</i>
+(Philadelphia, 1871).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLAS, GEORGE MIFFLIN<a name="ar34" id="ar34"></a></span> (1792-1864), American statesman
+and diplomat, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on
+the 10th of July 1792. He graduated at Princeton in 1810 at
+the head of his class; then studied law in the office of his father,
+Alexander J. Dallas, the financier, and was admitted to the bar
+in 1813. In the same year he accompanied Albert Gallatin, as
+his secretary, to Russia, and in 1814 returned to the United
+States as the bearer of important dispatches from the American
+peace commissioners at Ghent. He practised law in New York
+and Philadelphia, was chosen mayor of Philadelphia in 1828,
+and in 1829 was appointed by President Jackson, whom he had
+twice warmly supported for the presidency, United States
+attorney for the eastern district of Pennsylvania, a position long
+held by his father. From 1831 to 1833 he was a Democratic
+member of the United States Senate, in which he advocated a
+compromise tariff and strongly supported Jackson&rsquo;s position in
+regard to nullification. On the bank question he was at first at
+variance with the president; in January 1832 he presented in
+the Senate a memorial from the bank&rsquo;s president, Nicholas
+Biddle, and its managers, praying for a recharter, and subsequently
+he was chairman of a committee which reported a bill
+re-chartering the institution for a fifteen-year period. Afterwards,
+however, his views changed and he opposed the bank.
+From 1833 to 1835 Dallas was attorney-general of Pennsylvania,
+and from 1835 to 1839 was minister to Russia. During the
+following years he was engaged in a long struggle with James
+Buchanan for party leadership in Pennsylvania. He was vice-president
+of the United States from 1845 to 1849, but the
+appointment of Buchanan as secretary of state at once shut him
+off from all hope of party patronage or influence in the Polk
+administration, and he came to be looked upon as the leader of
+that body of conservative Democrats of the North, who, while
+they themselves chafed at the domination of Southern leaders,
+were disposed to disparage all anti-slavery agitation. By his
+casting vote at a critical period during the debate in the Senate
+on the tariff bill of 1846, he irretrievably lost his influence with
+the protectionist element of his native state, to whom he had
+given assurances of his support of the Tyler tariff of 1842. For
+several years after his retirement from office, he devoted himself
+to his law practice, and in 1856 succeeded James Buchanan as
+United States minister to England, where he remained until
+relieved by Charles Francis Adams in May 1861. During this
+trying period he represented his country with ability and tact,
+making every endeavour to strengthen the Union cause in Great
+Britain. He died at Philadelphia on the 1st of December 1864.
+He wrote a biographical memoir for an edition of his father&rsquo;s
+writings, which was published in 1871.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>His <i>Diary</i> of his residence in St Petersburg and London was
+published in Philadelphia in 1892.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLAS,<a name="ar35" id="ar35"></a></span> a city and the county-seat of Dallas county, Texas,
+U.S.A., about 220 m. N.W. of Houston, on the E. bank of the
+Trinity river. Pop. (1880) 10,358; (1890) 38,067; (1900)
+42,638, of whom 9035 were negroes and 3381 were foreign-born;
+(1910) 92,104. Area, about 15 sq. m. Dallas is served
+by the Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific, the Gulf, Colorado &amp;
+Santa Fé, the Houston &amp; Texas Central, the Missouri, Kansas
+&amp; Texas, the St Louis South-western, the Texas &amp; New Orleans,
+the Trinity &amp; Brazos Valley, and the Texas &amp; Pacific railways,
+and by interurban electric railways to Fort Worth and Sherman.
+The lower channel of the Trinity river has been greatly improved
+by the Federal government; but in 1908 the river was not
+navigable as far as Dallas. Among public buildings are
+the Carnegie library (1901), Dallas county court house, the
+city hall, the U.S. government building, St Matthew&rsquo;s cathedral
+(Prot. Episc.), the cathedral of the Sacred Heart (Rom. Cath.),
+the city hospital, St Paul&rsquo;s sanitarium (Rom. Cath.), and the
+Baptist Memorial sanitarium. Educational institutions include
+Dallas medical college (1901), the colleges of medicine and pharmacy
+of Baylor University, the medical college of South-western
+University (at Georgetown, Texas), Oak Cliff female academy,
+Patton seminary, St Mary&rsquo;s female college (Prot. Episc.), and
+Holy Trinity college (Rom. Cath.). The city had in 1908 three
+parks&mdash;Bachman&rsquo;s Reservoir (500 acres); Fair (525 acres)&mdash;the
+Texas state fair grounds, in which an annual exhibition is held&mdash;and
+City park (17 acres). Lake Cliff, Cycle and Oak Lawn parks
+are amusement grounds. A Confederate soldiers&rsquo; monument,
+a granite shaft 50 ft. high, was erected in 1897, with statues of
+R. E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, &ldquo;Stonewall&rdquo; Jackson and A. S.
+Johnston. Dallas was in 1900 the third city in population and
+the most important railway centre in Texas. It is a shipping
+centre for a large wheat, fruit and cotton-raising region, and
+the principal jobbing market for northern Texas, Oklahoma and
+part of Louisiana, and the biggest distributing point for agricultural
+machinery in the South-west. It is a livestock market,
+and one of the chief centres in the United States for the manufacture
+of saddlery and leather goods, and of cotton-gin
+machinery. It has flour and grist mills (the products of which
+ranked first in value among the city&rsquo;s manufactures in 1905),
+wholesale slaughtering and meat-packing establishments, cooperage
+works, railway repair shops, cotton compresses, lumber yards,
+salt works, and manufactories of cotton-seed oil and cake, boots
+and shoes and cotton and agricultural machinery. In 1900
+and 1905 it was the principal manufacturing centre in the state,
+the value of its factory product in 1905 being $15,627,668, an
+increase of 64.7% over that in 1900. The water-works are
+owned and operated by the city, and the water is taken from
+the Elm fork of Trinity river. There are several artesian wells.
+Dallas, named in honour of G. M. Dallas, was settled in 1841, and
+first chartered as a city in 1856. The city is governed, under a
+charter of 1907, by a mayor and four commissioners, who
+together pass ordinances, appoint nearly all city officers, and
+generally are responsible for administering the government.
+In addition a school board is elected by the people. The charter
+contains initiative and referendum provisions, provides for the
+recall of any elective city official, and prohibits the granting
+of any franchise for a longer term than twenty years.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLE<a name="ar36" id="ar36"></a></span> (pronounced &ldquo;dal,&rdquo; Fr. for a flag-stone or flat tile),
+a rapid falling over flat smooth rock surfaces in a river bed,
+especially in rivers flowing between basaltic rocks. The name is
+common in America, and came into use through the French
+employés of the Hudson&rsquo;s Bay Company. Well-known &ldquo;dalles&rdquo; are
+on the St Louis, St Croix and Wisconsin rivers. The &ldquo;dalles&rdquo; of
+the Columbia river are very beautiful, and have given its name to
+Dalles (1910 pop. 4880), county-seat of Wasco county, Oregon.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLIN, CYRUS EDWIN<a name="ar37" id="ar37"></a></span> (1861-&emsp;&emsp;), American sculptor,
+was born at Springville, Utah, on the 22nd of November 1861.
+He was a pupil of Truman H. Bartlett in Boston, of the École
+des Beaux Arts, the Académie Julien and the sculptors Henri M.
+Chapu and Jean Dampt (born 1858), in Paris, and on his return
+to America became instructor in modelling in the state normal art
+school in Boston. He is best known for his plastic representations
+of the North American Indian&mdash;especially for &ldquo;The Signal
+of Peace&rdquo; in Lincoln Park, Chicago, and &ldquo;The Medicine Man,&rdquo;
+in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. As a boy he had lived among
+the Indians in the Far West, and had learned their language. His
+later works include &ldquo;Pioneer Monument,&rdquo; Salt Lake City;
+&ldquo;Sir Isaac Newton,&rdquo; Congressional Library, Washington; and
+&ldquo;Don Quixote.&rdquo; He won a silver medal at the Paris Exposition,
+1900, and a gold medal at the St Louis Exposition, 1904.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLING AND BULWER, WILLIAM HENRY LYTTON
+EARLE BULWER,<a name="ar38" id="ar38"></a></span> <span class="sc">Baron</span> (1801-1872), better known as Sir
+<span class="sc">Henry Bulwer</span>, English diplomatist and author, was born in
+London on the 13th of February 1801. His father, General
+William Earle Bulwer, when colonel of the 106th regiment,
+had married Elizabeth Barbara Lytton, who&mdash;as the only child
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page770" id="page770"></a>770</span>
+of Richard Warburton Lytton, of Knebworth Park, in Hertfordshire&mdash;was
+sole heiress of the family of Norreys-Robinson-Lytton
+of Monacdhu in the island of Anglesea and of Guersylt
+in Denbighshire. Three sons were the fruit of this marriage.
+The second, afterwards Lord Dalling, was amply provided for
+by his selection as heir to his maternal grandmother; the
+paternal estates in Norfolk went to his elder brother William,
+and the maternal property in Herts to the youngest, Edward,
+known first as Bulwer the novelist and dramatist, and afterwards
+as the first Baron Lytton (q.v.) of Knebworth.</p>
+
+<p>General Bulwer, as brigadier-general of volunteers, was one
+of the four commanding officers to whom was entrusted the
+defence of England in 1804, when threatened with invasion by
+Napoleon. Three years afterwards, on the 7th of July 1807,
+he died prematurely at fifty-two at Heyden Hall. His young
+widow had then devolved upon her not only the double charge
+of caring for the estates in Herts and Norfolk, but the far
+weightier responsibility of superintending the education of her
+three sons, then in their earliest boyhood. Henry Bulwer was
+educated at Harrow, under Dr George Butler, and at Trinity
+College and Downing College, Cambridge. In 1822 he published
+a small volume of verse, beginning with an ode on the
+death of Napoleon. It is chiefly interesting now for its fraternal
+dedication to Edward Lytton Bulwer, then a youth of nineteen.</p>
+
+<p>On leaving Cambridge in the autumn of 1824, Henry Bulwer
+went, as emissary of the Greek committee then sitting in London,
+to the Morea, carrying with him £80,000 sterling, which he handed
+over to Prince Mavrocordato and his colleagues, as the responsible
+leaders of the War of Independence. He was accompanied
+on this expedition by Hamilton Browne, who, a year before,
+had been despatched by Lord Byron to Cephalonia to treat
+with the insurgent government. Shortly after his return to
+England in 1826, Bulwer published a record of this excursion,
+under the title of <i>An Autumn in Greece</i>. Meanwhile, bent for
+the moment upon following in his father&rsquo;s footsteps, he had, on
+the 19th of October 1825, been gazetted as a cornet in the
+2nd Life Guards. Within less than eight months, however, he
+had exchanged from cavalry to infantry, being enrolled on the
+2nd of June 1826 as an ensign in the 58th regiment. That
+ensigncy he retained for little more than a month, obtaining
+another unattached, which he held until the 1st of January 1829,
+when he finally abandoned the army. The court, not the camp,
+was to be the scene of his successes; and for thirty-eight years
+altogether&mdash;from August 1827 to August 1865&mdash;he contrived,
+while maturing from a young attaché to an astute and veteran
+ambassador, to hold his own with ease, and in the end was
+ranked amongst the subtlest intellects of his time as a master
+of diplomacy. His first appointment in his new profession
+was as an attaché at Berlin. In April 1830 he obtained his next
+step through his nomination as an attaché at Vienna. Thence,
+exactly a year afterwards, he was employed nearer home in the
+same capacity at the Hague.</p>
+
+<p>As yet ostensibly no more than a careless lounger in the
+<i>salons</i> of the continent, the young ex-cavalry officer veiled the
+keenest observation under an air of indifference. His constitutional
+energy, which throughout life was exceptionally
+intense and tenacious, wore from the first a mask of languor.
+When in reality most cautious he was seemingly most negligent.
+No matter what he happened at the moment to take in hand,
+the art he applied to it was always that highest art of all, the
+<i>ars celare artem</i>. His mastery of the lightest but most essential
+weapon in the armoury of the diplomatist, tact, came to him
+as it seemed intuitively, and from the outset was consummate.
+Talleyrand himself would have had no reason, even in Henry
+Bulwer&rsquo;s earliest years as an attaché, to write entreatingly, &ldquo;<i>pas
+de zèle</i>,&rdquo; to one who concealed so felicitously, even at starting,
+a lynx-like vigilance under an aspect the most phlegmatic.
+He had hardly reached his new post at the Hague when he found
+and seized his opportunity. The revolutionary explosion of
+July at Paris had been echoed on the 25th of August 1830 by
+an outburst of insurrection at Brussels. During the whole of
+September a succession of stormy events swept over Belgium,
+until the popular rising reached its climax on the 4th of October in
+the declaration of Belgian independence by the provisional
+government. At the beginning of the revolution, the young
+attaché was despatched by the then foreign secretary at Whitehall,
+Lord Aberdeen, to watch events as they arose and report
+their character. In the execution of his special mission he
+traversed the country in all directions amidst civil war, the issue
+of which was to the last degree problematic. Under those
+apparently bewildering circumstances, he was enabled by his
+sagacity and penetration to win his spurs as a diplomatist.
+Writing almost haphazard in the midst of the conflict, he sent
+home from day to day a series of despatches which threw a
+flood of light upon incidents that would otherwise have appeared
+almost inexplicable. Scarcely a week had elapsed, during which
+his predictions had been wonderfully verified, when he was
+summoned to London to receive the congratulations of the
+cabinet. He returned to Brussels no longer in a merely temporary
+or informal capacity. As secretary of legation, and afterwards
+as chargé d&rsquo;affaires, he assisted in furthering the negotiations
+out of which Belgium rose into a kingdom. Scarcely had this
+been accomplished when he wrote what may be called the first
+chapter of the history of the newly created Belgian kingdom.
+It appeared in 1831 as a brief but luminous paper in the January
+number of the <i>Westminster Review</i>. And as the events it recorded
+had helped to inaugurate its writer&rsquo;s career as a diplomatist, so
+did his narrative of those occurrences in the pages of the Radical
+quarterly signalize in a remarkable way the commencement of
+his long and consistent career as a Liberal politician. Shortly
+before his appearance as a reviewer, and immediately prior to
+the carrying of the first Reform Bill, Bulwer had won a seat in the
+House of Commons as member for Wilton, afterwards in 1831
+and 1832 sitting there as M.P. for Coventry. Nearly two years
+having elapsed, during which he was absent from parliament,
+he was in 1834 returned to Westminster as member for Marylebone.
+That position he retained during four sessions, winning
+considerable distinction as a debater. Within the very year
+in which he was chosen by the Marylebone electors, he brought
+out in two volumes, entitled <i>France&mdash;Literary, Social and
+Political</i>, the first half of a work which was only completed
+upon the publication, two years afterwards, of a second series,
+also in two volumes, under the title of <i>The Monarchy of the
+Middle Classes</i>. Through its pages he made good his claim to be
+regarded not merely as a keen-witted observer, but as one of the
+most sagacious and genial delineators of the generic Frenchman,
+above all of that supreme type of the race, with whom all through
+his life he especially delighted to hold familiar intercourse, the
+true Parisian. Between the issuing from the press of these two
+series, Henry Bulwer had prefixed an intensely sympathetic
+<i>Life of Lord Byron</i> to the Paris edition of the poet&rsquo;s works published
+by Galignani,&mdash;a memoir republished sixteen years afterwards.
+A political argument of a curiously daring and outspoken
+character, entitled <i>The Lords, the Government, and the Country</i>,
+was given to the public in 1836 by Bulwer, in the form of an
+elaborate letter to a constituent. At this point his literary
+labours, which throughout life were with him purely labours
+by-the-way, ceased for a time, and he disappeared during three
+decades from authorship and from the legislature.</p>
+
+<p>During the period of his holding the position of chargé d&rsquo;affaires
+at Brussels, Bulwer had seized every opportunity of making
+lengthened sojourns at Paris, always for him the choicest place of
+residence. It was in the midst of one of these <i>dolce far niente</i>
+loiterings on the boulevards that, on the 14th of August 1837, he
+received his nomination as secretary of embassy at Constantinople.
+Recognizing his exceptional ability Lord Ponsonby, the
+British ambassador at Constantinople, at once entrusted to him
+the difficult task of negotiating a commercial treaty, which had
+the double object of removing the intolerable conditions which
+hampered British trade with Turkey and of dealing a blow at the
+threatening power of Mehemet Ali, pasha of Egypt, by shattering
+the system of monopolies on which it was largely based. In this
+difficult task Bulwer was helped by the hatred of Sultan Mahmed
+II. for Mehemet Ali, but the treaty was none the less a remarkable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page771" id="page771"></a>771</span>
+proof of his diplomatic skill, and the compliment was well
+deserved when Palmerston, in writing his congratulations to him
+from Windsor Castle, on the 13th of September 1838, pronounced
+the treaty a <i>capo d&rsquo;opera</i>, adding that without reserve it would
+be at once ratified. Shortly after this achievement Bulwer was
+nominated secretary of embassy at St Petersburg. Illness,
+however, compelled him to delay his northern journey&mdash;almost
+opportunely, as it happened, for in June 1839 he was despatched,
+in the same capacity, to the more congenial atmosphere of Paris.
+At that juncture the developments of the feud between Mehemet
+Ali and the Porte were threatening to bring England and France
+into armed collision (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Mehemet Ali</a></span>). In 1839 and 1840,
+during the temporary absence of his chief, Lord Granville, the
+secretary of embassy was gazetted <i>ad interim</i> chargé d&rsquo;affaires at
+the court of France, and thus during this critical time he had
+fresh opportunities of winning distinction as a diplomatist.</p>
+
+<p>On the 14th of November 1843 he was appointed ambassador
+at the court of the young Spanish queen Isabella II. Upon his
+arrival at Madrid signal evidence was afforded of the estimation
+in which he was then held as a diplomatist. He was chosen
+arbitrator between Spain and Morocco, then confronting each
+other in deadly hostility, and, as the result of his mediation, a
+treaty of peace was signed between the two powers in 1844. In
+1846 a much more formidable difficulty arose,&mdash;one which, after
+threatening war between France and England, led at last to a
+diplomatic rupture between the British and Spanish governments.
+The dynastic intrigues of Louis Philippe were the
+immediate cause of this estrangement, and those intrigues found
+their climax in what has ever since been known in European
+annals as the Spanish Marriages. The storm sown in the Spanish
+marriages was reaped in the whirlwind of the February revolution.
+And the explosion which took place at Paris was answered
+a month afterwards at Madrid by a similar outbreak. Marshal
+Narvaez thereupon assumed the dictatorship, and wreaked upon
+the insurgents a series of reprisals of the most pitiless character.
+These excessive severities of the marshal-dictator the British
+ambassador did his utmost to mitigate. When at last, however,
+Narvaez carried his rigour to the length of summarily suppressing
+the constitutional guarantees, Bulwer sent in a formal protest in
+the name of England against an act so entirely ruthless and unjustifiable.
+This courageous proceeding at once drew down upon
+the British envoy a counter-stroke as ill-judged as it was unprecedented.
+Narvaez, with matchless effrontery, denounced the
+ambassador from England as an accomplice in the conspiracies
+of the Progressistas; and despite his position as an envoy, and in
+insolent defiance of the Palmerstonian boast, <i>Civis Britannicus</i>,
+Bulwer, on the 12th of June, was summarily required to quit
+Madrid within twenty-four hours. Two days afterwards M.
+Isturitz, the Spanish ambassador at the court of St James&rsquo;s,
+took his departure from London. Diplomatic relations were not
+restored between the two countries until years had elapsed, nor
+even then until after a formal apology, dictated by Lord Palmerston,
+had been signed by the prime minister of Queen
+Isabella. Before his return the ambassador was gazetted a
+K.C.B., being promoted to the grand cross some three years
+afterwards. In addition to this mark of honour he received the
+formal approbation of the ministry, and with it the thanks of
+both Houses of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Before the year of his return from the peninsula had run out
+Sir Henry Bulwer was married to the Hon. Georgiana Charlotte
+Mary Wellesley, youngest daughter of the 1st Baron Cowley,
+and niece to the duke of Wellington. Early in the following year,
+on the 27th of April 1849, he was nominated ambassador at
+Washington. There he acquired immense popularity. His
+principal success was the compact known as the Clayton-Bulwer
+Treaty (q.v.), ratified in May 1850, pledging the contracting
+governments to respect the neutrality of the meditated ship canal
+through Central America, bringing the waters of the Atlantic
+and Pacific into direct communication. After having been
+accredited as ambassador to the United States for three years,
+Sir Henry Bulwer, early in 1852, was despatched as minister
+plenipotentiary at the court of the grand duke of Tuscany at
+Florence. Shortly after his retirement from that post in the
+January of 1855, he was entrusted with various diplomatic
+missions, in one of which he was empowered as commissioner
+under the 23rd article of the treaty of Paris, 1856, to investigate
+the state of things in the Danubian principalities, with a view to
+their definite reorganization. Finally he was installed, from
+May 1858 to August 1865, as the immediate successor, after the
+close of the Crimean war, of the &ldquo;Great Elchi,&rdquo; Viscount Stratford
+de Redcliffe, as ambassador extraordinary to the Ottoman
+Porte at Constantinople.</p>
+
+<p>In the winter of 1865 Bulwer returned home from the Bosporus,
+and retired with a pension. He was elected member for Tamworth
+on the 17th of November 1868, and retained his seat until
+gazetted as a peer of the realm on the 21st of March 1871, under
+the title of Baron Dalling and Bulwer of Wood Dalling in the
+county of Norfolk. Upon the eve of his return to his old haunts
+as a debater and a politician he had asserted his claim to literary
+distinction by giving to the world in two volumes his four
+masterly sketches of typical men, entitled <i>Historical Characters</i>.
+This work, dedicated to his brother Edward, in testimony of
+the writer&rsquo;s fraternal affection and friendship, portrayed in
+luminous outline Talleyrand the Politic Man, Cobbett the Contentious
+Man, Canning the Brilliant Man, and Mackintosh the
+Man of Promise. Two other kindred sketches, those of Sir
+Robert Peel and Viscount Melbourne, having been selected from
+among their author&rsquo;s papers, were afterwards published posthumously.
+Another work of ampler outline and larger pretension
+was begun and partially issued from the press during Lord
+Dalling&rsquo;s lifetime, but not completed. This was the <i>Life of
+Viscount Palmerston</i>, the first two volumes of which were published
+in 1870. A third volume appeared four years afterwards.
+Even then it left the story of the English statesman broken
+off so abruptly that the work remained at the last the merest
+fragment. It was completed by Evelyn Ashley.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Dalling died unexpectedly on the 23rd of May 1872 at
+Naples. He had no issue, and the title became extinct. In his
+public career he enjoyed a three-fold success&mdash;as ambassador, as
+politician and as man of letters. His popularity in society was
+at all times remarkable, mainly no doubt from his mastery of all
+the subtler arts of a skilled conversationalist. The apparent
+languor with which he related an anecdote, flung off a <i>bon mot</i>,
+or indulged in a momentary stroke of irony imparted interest to
+the narrative, wings to the wit and point to the sarcasm in a
+manner peculiarly his own.</p>
+<div class="author">(C. K.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALLMEYER, JOHN HENRY<a name="ar39" id="ar39"></a></span> (1830-1883), Anglo-German
+optician, was born on the 6th of September 1830 at Loxten,
+Westphalia, the son of a landowner. On leaving school at the
+age of sixteen he was apprenticed to an Osnabrück optician, and
+in 1851 he came to London, where he obtained work with an
+optician, W. Hewitt, who shortly afterwards, with his workmen,
+entered the employment of Andrew Ross, a lens and telescope
+manufacturer. Dallmeyer&rsquo;s position in this workshop appears
+to have been an unpleasant one, and led him to take, for a time,
+employment as French and German <span class="correction" title="amended from corrrespondent">correspondent</span> for a commercial
+firm. After a year he was, however, re-engaged by Ross
+as scientific adviser, and was entrusted with the testing and
+finishing of the highest class of optical apparatus. This appointment
+led to his marriage with Ross&rsquo;s second daughter, Hannah,
+and to the inheritance, at Ross&rsquo;s death (1859), of a third of his
+employer&rsquo;s large fortune and the telescope manufacturing portion
+of the business. Turning from astronomical work to the making
+of photographic lenses (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Photography</a></span>), he introduced
+improvements in both portrait and landscape lenses, in object-glasses
+for the microscope and in condensers for the optical
+lantern. In connexion with celestial photography he constructed
+photo-heliographs for the Wilna observatory in 1863, for the
+Harvard College observatory in 1864, and, in 1873, several for
+the British government. Dallmeyer&rsquo;s instruments achieved a
+wide success in Europe and America, taking the highest awards
+at various international exhibitions. The Russian government
+gave him the order of St Stanislaus, and the French government
+made him chevalier of the Legion of Honour. He was for many
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page772" id="page772"></a>772</span>
+years upon the councils of both the Royal Astronomical and
+Royal Photographic societies. About 1880 he was advised to
+give up the personal supervision of his workshops, and to travel
+for his health, but he died on board ship, off the coast of New
+Zealand, on the 30th of December 1883.</p>
+
+<p>His second son, <span class="sc">Thomas Rudolphus Dallmeyer</span> (1859-1906),
+who assumed control of the business on the failure of his father&rsquo;s
+health, was principally known as the first to introduce telephotographic
+lenses into ordinary practice (patented 1891), and
+he was the author of a standard book on the subject (<i>Telephotography</i>,
+1899). He served as president of the Royal Photographic
+Society in 1900-1903.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALL&rsquo; ONGARO, FRANCESCO<a name="ar40" id="ar40"></a></span> (1808-1873), Italian writer,
+born in Friuli, was educated for the priesthood, but abandoned
+his orders, and taking to political journalism founded the <i>Favilla</i>
+at Trieste in the Liberal interest. In 1848 he enlisted under
+Garibaldi, and next year was a member of the assembly which
+proclaimed the republic in Rome, being given by Mazzini the
+direction of the <i>Monitor officiale</i>. On the downfall of the republic
+he fled to Switzerland, then to Belgium and later to France,
+taking a prominent part in revolutionary journalism; it was not
+till 1860 that he returned to Italy, where he was appointed
+professor of dramatic literature at Florence. Subsequently he
+was transferred to Naples, where he died on the 10th of January
+1873. His patriotic poems, <i>Stornelli</i>, composed in early life,
+had a great popular success; and he produced a number of plays,
+notably <i>Fornaretto</i>, <i>Bianca Capello</i>, <i>Fasma</i> and <i>Il Tesoro</i>. His
+collected <i>Fantasie drammatiche e liriche</i> were published in his
+lifetime.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALMATIA<a name="ar41" id="ar41"></a></span> (Ger. <i>Dalmatien</i>; Ital. <i>Dalmazia</i>; Serbo-Croatian,
+<i>Dalmacija</i>), a kingdom and crownland of the Austro-Hungarian
+empire, in the north-west of the Balkan Peninsula,
+and on the Adriatic Sea. Dalmatia is bounded, on the landward
+side, by Croatia and Bosnia, in the N. and N.E.; and by Herzegovina
+and Montenegro, in the S.E. and S. Its area amounts to
+4923 sq. m.; its greatest length, from north-west to south-east,
+is 210 m.; its breadth reaches 35 m. between Point Planca and
+the Bosnian frontier, diminishing to less than 1 m. at Cattaro.
+Near the ports of Klek and Castelnuovo the Herzegovinian frontier
+comes down to the sea,<a name="fa1b" id="fa1b" href="#ft1b"><span class="sp">1</span></a> but only for a total distance of 14½ m.</p>
+
+<p><i>Physical Features.</i>&mdash;No part of the Mediterranean shore, except
+the coast of Greece, is so deeply indented as the Dalmatian
+littoral, with its multitude of rock-bound bays and inlets. It is
+sheltered from the open sea by a rampart of islands which vary
+greatly in size; a few being large enough to support several
+thousand inhabitants, while others are mere reefs, swept bare by
+the sea, or tenanted only by rabbits and seabirds. This Dalmatian
+archipelago, separated from the Istrian by the Gulf of
+Quarnerolo, forms two island groups, the northern or Liburnian,
+and the southern; with open water intervening, off Point Planca.
+In calm weather the channels between the islands and the mainland
+resemble a chain of landlocked lakes, brilliantly clear to a
+depth of several fathoms. As a rule, the surrounding hills are
+rugged, bleached almost white or pale russet, and destitute of
+verdure; but their monotony is relieved by the half-ruined
+castles and monasteries clinging to the rocks, or by the beauty
+of such cities as Ragusa, or Arbe, with its fantastic row of
+steeples overlooking the beach. The principal islands, Arbe,
+Brazza, Curzola, Lacroma, Lesina, Lissa and Meleda, are described
+under separate headings. The promontory of Sabbioncello,
+or Punta di Stagno, which juts out for 41 m. into the sea,
+between Curzola and Lesina, is almost another island; for its
+breadth, which nowhere exceeds 5 m., dwindles to about 1 m.
+at the narrow isthmus which unites it with the shore. There are
+two small ports on this isthmus&mdash;on the south, Stagno Grande
+(Serbo-Croatian, <i>Ston Veliki</i>), once celebrated for its salt and
+shipbuilding industries, and, on the north, Stagno Piccolo (<i>Ston
+Mali</i>). Dalmatia possesses a magnificent anchorage in the
+Bocche di Cattaro, and there are numerous lesser havens, at
+Sebenico, Traù, Zara and elsewhere along the coast and among
+the islands.</p>
+
+<p>The country is almost everywhere hilly or mountainous. On
+the Croatian border rises the lofty barrier of the Velebit, which
+culminates in Sveto Brdo (5751 ft.), and Vakanski Vrh (5768 ft.).
+The Dinaric Alps form the frontier between Dalmatia and
+Bosnia; Dinara (6007 ft.), which gives its name to the whole
+chain, and Troglav (6276 ft.), being the highest Dalmatian
+summits. North-west of Sinj rise the Svilaja and Mose&#263;
+Planinas; the ridges of Mosor and Biokovo, with Sveto Juraj
+(5781 ft.), follow the windings of the coast from Spalato to
+Macarsca; Orjen marks the meeting-place of the Herzegovinian,
+Montenegrin and Dalmatian frontiers, and the Sutorman range
+appears in the extreme south. The barren dry limestone of the
+Dalmatian highlands has been aptly compared with a petrified
+sponge; for it is honeycombed with underground caverns and
+water-courses, into which the rainfall is at once filtered. Thus
+arises a complete system of subterranean rivers, with waterfalls,
+lakes and regular seasons of flood. Even the few surface rivers
+vanish and emerge again at intervals. The Trebinj&#269;ica, for instance,
+disappearing in Herzegovina, supplies both the broad
+and swift estuary of Ombla, near Ragusa, and the fresh-water
+spring of Doli, which issues from the bottom of the sea. Apart
+from the Ombla, and the Narenta (Serbo-Croatian, <i>Neretva</i>;
+Roman, <i>Naro</i>), which creates a broad marshy delta between
+Metkovi&#263; and the sea, Dalmatia has only three rivers more than
+25 m. long; the Zermagna (<i>Zrmanja</i>, <i>Tedanium</i>), Kerka, (<i>Krka</i>,
+<i>Titius</i>), and Cetina (<i>Cetina</i>; <i>Narona</i> or <i>Tilurus</i>). The Zermagna
+skirts the southern foothills of the Velebit and falls into the
+harbour of Novigrad. Better known is the Kerka, which rises
+in the Dinaric Alps and flows south-westward to the Adriatic.
+Near Scardona (<i>Skradin</i>) it spreads into a broad lake, and forms
+several fine waterfalls, after receiving its tributary the Cikola
+(<i>&#268;ikola</i>), from the east. South of Spalato, the Cetina, which also
+springs from the Dinaric Alps, descends to the sea at Almissa
+(<i>Omi&#353;</i>), after passing between the Mosor and Biokovo ranges.
+There are a few small lakes near Zara, Zaravecchia and the
+Narenta estuary; while the fertile, but unhealthy, hollows
+among the mountains fill with water after heavy rain, and sometimes
+cause disastrous floods. But most parts of the country
+suffer from drought.</p>
+
+<p>For an account of the chief geological formations see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Balkan
+Peninsula</a></span>. Small quantities of iron, lignite, asphalt and bay
+salt are the only minerals of commercial importance.</p>
+
+<p>The climate is warm and healthy, the mean temperature at
+Zara being 57° F., at Lesina 62°, and at Ragusa 63°. The prevailing
+wind is the sirocco, or S.E.; but the terrible Bora, or
+N.N.E., may blow at any season of the year. The average annual
+rainfall is about 28 in., but a dry and a wet year usually alternate.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fauna.</i>&mdash;Bears, badgers and wild cats, with a larger number
+of wolves and foxes, find shelter in the Dinaric Alps and on the
+heights of Svilaja, Mosor and Biokovo; while jackals exist
+on Curzola and Sabbioncello, almost their last refuges in Europe.
+Roedeer are uncommon, and the wild boar, chamois, red-deer and
+beaver are extinct; but hares and rabbits abound. The game-laws
+are not strict, and are often evaded by the Morlachs;
+but moderate sport may be obtained in the fens formed by the
+Cetina about Sinj, and the lagoons of the Narenta estuary;
+both regions being frequented by wild swans, geese, duck, snipe
+and other aquatic birds. Among land-birds, the commonest
+are quails, woodcock, partridges, and especially the so-called
+&ldquo;stone-fowl&rdquo; (<i>Steinhuhn</i>, <i>Perdix Graeca</i>). Tortoises are
+numerous; snakes, lizards, scorpions and innumerable sand-flies
+infest the dry hillsides; and the limestone caverns are
+peopled by sightless bats, reptiles, fish, flies, beetles, spiders,
+crustacea and molluscs.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fisheries.</i>&mdash;No region of Europe is richer in its marine fauna
+and flora. Sponge and coral fisheries afford a valuable source of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page773" id="page773"></a>773</span>
+income to the peasantry, many of whom also go northward for the
+sardine and tunny fisheries of the Istrian coast, while salmon,
+trout and eels are caught in the Dalmatian rivers.</p>
+
+<p><i>Flora.</i>&mdash;The olive, almond, fig, orange, palm, aloe, myrtle,
+locust-tree and other characteristic members of the Mediterranean
+flora thrive in the sheltered valleys of the Dalmatian littoral,
+where almond-blossoms appear in mid-winter, and the palm
+occasionally bears ripe fruit. The <i>marasca</i>, or wild cherry, is
+abundant, and yields the celebrated liqueur called <i>maraschino</i>.
+But at a little distance from the rivers and on the more exposed
+parts of the coast the aspect of the country changes entirely.
+Patches of thin grass, heather, juniper, thyme, tamarisks and
+mountain roses hardly relieve the bareness and aridity of the
+seaward slopes.</p>
+
+<p><i>Forests.</i>&mdash;Oaks, pines and beeches still, in a few parts, clothe
+the landward slopes, but, as a rule, the forests for which Dalmatia
+was once famous were cut down for the Venetian shipyards
+or burned by pirates; while every attempt at replanting is
+frustrated by the shallowness of the soil, the drought and the
+multitude of goats that browse on the young trees.</p>
+
+<p><i>Agriculture.</i>&mdash;Little more than one-tenth of the whole surface
+is under the plough; the rest, where it is not altogether sterile,
+being chiefly mountain pasture, vineyards and garden land.
+Asses are the favourite beasts of burden; goats are strikingly
+numerous; and sheep are kept for the sake of their mutton,
+which is almost the only animal food freely consumed by the
+peasantry. Cattle-breeding, bee-keeping, and the cultivation
+of fruit and vegetables, especially potatoes and beetroot, are
+among the principal resources of the people, while wheat, rye,
+barley, oats, Indian corn, hemp and millet are also grown.
+Viticulture is carried on with great and increasing success (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Wine</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p><i>Land-tenure.</i>&mdash;Individual proprietorship of the soil is rare,
+for, despite the decadence of the <i>zadruga</i> or household community,
+the tenure of land and the privilege of using the communal
+domain still appertain to the family as a whole. There
+are a few large estates, but most of the land is parcelled out in
+small holdings.</p>
+
+<p><i>Industries.</i>&mdash;Besides fishing, farming and such allied trades as
+shipbuilding, wine and oil pressing, and the distillation of
+spirits, notably <i>maraschino</i>, a few other industries are practised,
+such as tile-burning and the manufacture of soap; but these are
+of minor importance. Certain crafts are also carried on by the
+country-folk, in their own homes; thus the peasant is sometimes
+his own mason, carpenter, weaver and miller. Manufactured
+goods and foodstuffs are imported, in return for asphalt, lignite,
+bay salt, wine, spirits, oil, honey, wax and hides; and there is
+a lucrative transit trade with Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro,
+Turkey and various Adriatic and Mediterranean ports.</p>
+
+<p><i>Communications.</i>&mdash;Communications are defective, some parts
+of the interior being only accessible by the roughest of mountain
+roads. The principal railway, in point of size, traverses the
+central districts, linking together Knin, Spalato, Sebenico and
+Sinj; but the southern lines, which unite Dalmatia with Herzegovina
+and terminate at Ragusa, Metkovi&#263; and Castlenuovo
+on the Bocche di Cattaro, are almost of equal importance,
+Cattaro being one of the chief outlets for Montenegrin commerce,
+while the vessels which steam up the Narenta to Metkovi&#263; carry
+the bulk of the sea-borne trade of Herzegovina. In 1897
+Dalmatia possessed 151 post and 98 telegraph offices.</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Towns.</i>&mdash;The chief towns are Zara, the capital, with
+32,506<a name="fa2b" id="fa2b" href="#ft2b"><span class="sp">2</span></a> inhabitants in 1900, Spalato (27,198), Sebenico (24,751),
+Traù (17,064), Ragusa (13,174), Macarsca (11,016), and
+Cattaro (5418). All these are described under separate headings.</p>
+
+<p><i>Population and National Characteristics.</i>&mdash;With a constant
+excess of male over female children, the population increased
+steadily from 1869 to 1900, when it reached 591,597. Of this
+total 1% are foreigners and about 3% Italians, whose numbers
+tend slowly to diminish. The Morlachs, who constitute the
+remaining 96%, belong to the Serbo-Croatian branch of the
+Slavonic race, having absorbed the Latinized Illyrians, Albanians
+and other alien elements with which they have been associated.
+The name of <i>Morlachs</i>, <i>Morlaks</i> or <i>Morlacks</i> commonly bestowed
+by English writers on the Dalmatian Slavs, though sometimes
+restricted to the peasantry of the hills, is an abbreviated form
+of <i>Mavrovlachi</i>, meaning either &ldquo;Black Vlachs,&rdquo; or, less probably,
+&ldquo;Sea Vlachs.&rdquo; It was originally applied to the scattered
+remnants of the Latin or Latinized inhabitants of central Illyria,
+who were driven from their homes by the barbarian invaders
+during the 7th century, and took refuge among the mountains.
+Throughout the middle ages the Mavrovlachi were usually
+nomadic shepherds, cattle-drovers or muleteers. In the 14th
+century they emigrated from central Illyria into northern
+Dalmatia and maritime Croatia; and these regions were thenceforward
+known as <i>Morlacchia</i>, until the 18th century. Gradually,
+however, the Mavrovlachi became identified with the Slavs,
+whose language and manners they adopted, and to whom they
+gave their own name. In northern Dalmatia the Slavs of the
+interior are still called <i>Morlacchi</i>; in the south this name expresses
+contempt. Of the Vlachs, properly so called, very few
+are left in the country; although the name Vlachs (q.v.) is
+frequently used by the Slavs to designate the Italians and the
+town-dwellers generally. The literary languages of Dalmatia
+are Italian and Serbo-Croatian; the spoken language is, in
+each case, modified by the introduction of various dialect forms.</p>
+
+<p>The Morlachs wear a picturesque and brightly-coloured
+costume, resembling that of the Serbs (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Servia</a></span>). In appearance
+they are sometimes blond, with blue or grey eyes, like
+the Shumadian peasantry of Servia; more often, olive-skinned,
+with dark hair and eyes, like the Montenegrins, whom they rival
+in stature, strength and courage; while their conservative
+spirit, their devotion to national traditions, poetry and music,
+their pride, indolence and superstition, are typically Servian.
+Dalmatian public life is deeply affected by the jealousies which
+subsist between the Slavs and the Italians, whose influence,
+though everywhere waning, remains predominant in some of the
+towns; and between Orthodox &ldquo;Serbs,&rdquo; who use the Cyrillic
+alphabet, and Roman Catholic &ldquo;Croats,&rdquo; who prefer the Latin.</p>
+
+<p><i>Government.</i>&mdash;Dalmatia occupies a somewhat anomalous
+position in the Austro-Hungarian state system. Itself a crownland
+of Austria, returning eleven members to the Austrian
+parliament, it is severed geographically from the other Austrian
+lands by the Hungarian kingdom of Croatia. Ethnologically
+it is one with Croatia, and it is included in the official title of
+the Croatian king, i.e. the emperor. The political system is
+based on a law of the 26th of February 1861. The provincial
+diet is composed of 43 members, comprising the Roman Catholic
+archbishop, the Orthodox bishop of Zara and representatives
+of the chief taxpayers, the towns and the communes. Benkovac,
+on the main road from Zara to Spalato, Cattaro, Curzola, Imotski,
+21 m. N. by E. of Macarsca, Knin, Lesina, Macarsca, Ragusa,
+Sebenico, Sinj, Spalato and Zara, give names to the twelve
+administrative districts, of which they are the capitals.</p>
+
+<p><i>Defence.</i>&mdash;Conscription is in force, as elsewhere in Austria,
+and the Dalmatian coast furnishes the Austrian&mdash;as formerly
+the Venetian&mdash;navy with many of its best recruits.</p>
+
+<p><i>Religion.</i>&mdash;Roman Catholicism is the religion of more than
+80% of the population, the remainder belonging chiefly to the
+Orthodox Church. The Roman Catholic archbishop has his seat
+in Zara, while Cattaro, Lesina, Ragusa, Sebenico and Spalato are
+bishoprics. At the head of the Orthodox community stands
+the bishop of Zara.</p>
+
+<p>The use of Slavonic liturgies written in the Glagolitic alphabet,
+a very ancient privilege of the Roman Catholics in Dalmatia
+and Croatia, caused much controversy during the first years of
+the 20th century. There was considerable danger that the Latin
+liturgies would be altogether superseded by the Glagolitic,
+especially among the northern islands and in rural communes,
+where the Slavonic element is all-powerful. In 1904 the Vatican
+forbade the use of Glagolitic at the festival of SS. Cyril and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page774" id="page774"></a>774</span>
+Methodius, as likely to impair the unity of Catholicism. A
+few years previously the Slavonic archbishop Raj&#269;evi&#263; of Zara,
+in discussing the &ldquo;Glagolitic controversy,&rdquo; had denounced the
+movement as &ldquo;an innovation introduced by Panslavism to
+make it easy for the Catholic clergy, after any great revolution
+in the Balkan States, to break with Latin Rome.&rdquo; This view
+is shared by very many, perhaps by the majority, of the Roman
+Catholics in Dalmatia.</p>
+
+<p><i>Education.</i>&mdash;Education progressed slowly between 1860 and
+1900, attendance at school being often a hardship in the poor and
+widely scattered hamlets of the interior. In 1890 more than
+80% of the population could neither read nor write, although
+schools are maintained by every commune. In 1893 the country
+possessed 5 intermediate and 337 elementary schools, 6 theological
+seminaries, 6 gymnasia, and about 40 continuation and
+technical schools.</p>
+
+<p><i>Antiquities.</i>&mdash;To the foreign visitor Dalmatia is chiefly
+interesting as a treasury of art and antiquities. The grave-mounds
+of Curzola, Lesina and Sabbioncello have yielded a few
+relics of prehistoric man, and the memory of the early Celtic
+conquerors and Greek settlers is preserved only in a few place-names;
+but the monuments left by the Romans are numerous
+and precious. They are chiefly confined to the cities; for the
+civilization of the country was always urban, just as its history
+is a record of isolated city-states rather than of a united nation.
+Beyond the walls of its larger towns, little was spared by the
+barbarian Goths, Avars and Slavs; and the battered fragments
+of Roman work which mark the sites of Salona, near Spalato,
+and of many other ancient cities, are of slight antiquarian interest
+and slighter artistic value. Among the monuments of the Roman
+period, by far the most noteworthy in Dalmatia, and, indeed,
+in the whole Balkan Peninsula, is the Palace of Diocletian at
+Spalato (q.v.). Dalmatian architecture was Byzantine in its
+general character from the 6th century until the close of the 10th.
+The oldest memorials of this period are the vestiges of three
+basilicas, excavated in Salona, and dating from the first half of
+the 7th century at latest. Byzantine art, in the latter half of
+this period and the two succeeding centuries, continued to
+flourish in those cities which, like Zara, gave their allegiance to
+Venice; just as, in the architecture of Traù and other cities
+dominated by Hungary, there are distinct traces of German
+influence. The belfry of S. Maria, at Zara, erected in 1105, is
+first in a long list of Romanesque buildings. At Arbe there is
+a beautiful Romanesque campanile which also belongs to the
+12th century; but the finest example in this style is the cathedral
+of Traù. The 14th century Dominican and Franciscan convents
+in Ragusa are also noteworthy. Romanesque lingered on in
+Dalmatia until it was displaced by Venetian Gothic in the early
+years of the 15th century. The influence of Venice was then
+at its height. Even in the hostile republic of Ragusa the
+Romanesque of the custom-house and Rectors&rsquo; palace is combined
+with Venetian Gothic, while the graceful balconies and
+ogee windows of the Prijeki closely follow their Venetian models.
+Gothic, however, which had been adopted very late, was abandoned
+very early; for in 1441 Giorgio Orsini of Zara, summoned
+from Venice to design the cathedral of Sebenico, brought with
+him the influence of the Italian Renaissance. The new forms
+which he introduced were eagerly imitated and developed by
+other architects, until the period of decadence&mdash;which virtually
+concludes the history of Dalmatian art&mdash;set in during the latter
+half of the 17th century. Special mention must be made of the
+carved woodwork, embroideries and plate preserved in many
+churches. The silver statuette and the reliquary of St Biagio at
+Ragusa, and the silver ark of St Simeon at Zara, are fine specimens
+of Byzantine and Italian jewellers&rsquo; work, ranging in date
+from the 11th or 12th to the 17th century.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">History</p>
+
+<p><i>Dalmatia under Roman Rule</i>, A.D. 9-1102.&mdash;The history of
+Dalmatia may be said to begin with the year 180 B.C., when the
+tribe from which the country derives its name declared itself
+independent of Gentius, the Illyrian king, and established a
+republic. Its capital was Delminium<a name="fa3b" id="fa3b" href="#ft3b"><span class="sp">3</span></a>; its territory stretched
+northwards from the Narenta to the Cetina, and later to the
+Kerka, where it met the confines of Liburnia. In 156 B.C. the
+Dalmatians were for the first time attacked by a Roman army
+and compelled to pay tribute; but only in the time of Augustus
+(31 B.C.-A.D. 14) was their land finally annexed, after the last
+of many formidable revolts had been crushed by Tiberius in
+A.D. 9. This event was followed by total submission and a
+ready acceptance of the Latin civilization which overspread
+Illyria (q.v.). The downfall of the Western Empire left this
+region subject to Gothic rulers, Odoacer and Theodoric, from
+476 to 535, when it was added by Justinian to the Eastern Empire.
+The great Slavonic migration into Illyria, which wrought a
+complete change in the fortunes of Dalmatia, took place in the
+first half of the 7th century. In other parts of the Balkan
+Peninsula these invaders&mdash;Serbs, Croats or Bulgars&mdash;found little
+difficulty in expelling or absorbing the native population. But
+here they were baffled when confronted by the powerful maritime
+city-states, highly civilized, and able to rely on the moral if not
+the material support of their kinsfolk in Italy. Consequently,
+while the country districts were settled by the Slavs, the Latin or
+Italian population flocked for safety to Ragusa, Zara and other
+large towns, and the whole country was thus divided between
+two frequently hostile communities. This opposition was intensified
+by the schism between Eastern and Western Christianity
+(1054), the Slavs as a rule preferring the Orthodox or
+sometimes the Bogomil creed, while the Italians were firmly
+attached to the Papacy. Not until the 15th century did the
+rival races contribute to a common civilization in the literature
+of Ragusa. To such a division of population may be attributed
+the two dominant characteristics of local history&mdash;the total
+absence of national as distinguished from civic life, and the
+remarkable development of art, science and literature. Bosnia,
+Servia and Bulgaria had each its period of national greatness,
+but remained intellectually backward; Dalmatia failed ever to
+attain political or racial unity, but the Dalmatian city-states,
+isolated and compelled to look to Italy for support, shared
+perforce in the march of Italian civilization. Their geographical
+position suffices to explain the relatively small influence exercised
+by Byzantine culture throughout the six centuries (535-1102)
+during which Dalmatia was part of the Eastern empire. Towards
+the close of this period Byzantine rule tended more and more to
+become merely nominal. In 806 Dalmatia was added to the
+Holy Roman empire, but was soon restored; in 829 the coast was
+ravaged by Saracens. A strange republic of Servian pirates arose
+at the mouth of the Narenta. In the 10th century description of
+Dalmatia by Constantine Porphyrogenitus (<i>De Administrando
+Imperio</i>, 29-37), this region is called <i>Pagania</i>, from the fact that
+its inhabitants had only accepted Christianity about 890, or 250
+years later than the other Slavs. These <i>Pagani</i>, or <i>Arentani</i>
+(Narentines), utterly defeated a Venetian fleet despatched against
+them in 887, and for more than a century exacted tribute from
+Venice itself. In 998 they were finally crushed by the doge
+Pietro Orseolo II., who assumed the title duke of Dalmatia,
+though without prejudice to Byzantine suzerainty. Meanwhile
+the Croatian kings had extended their rule over northern and
+central Dalmatia, exacting tribute from the Italian cities, Traù,
+Zara and others, and consolidating their own power in the purely
+Slavonic towns, such as Nona or Belgrad (Zaravecchia). The
+Church was involved in the general confusion; for the synod of
+Spalato, in 1059, had forbidden the use of any but Greek or Latin
+liturgies, and so had accentuated the differences between Latin
+and Slav. A raid of Norman corsairs in 1073 was hardly defeated
+with the help of a Venetian fleet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page775" id="page775"></a>775</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Rivalry of Venice and Hungary in Dalmatia</i>, 1102-1420.&mdash;Unable
+amid such dissensions to stand alone, unprotected by the
+Eastern empire and hindered by their internal dissensions from
+uniting in a defensive league, the city-states turned to Venice
+and Hungary for support. The Venetians, to whom they were
+already bound by race, language and culture, could afford to
+concede liberal terms because their own principal aims was not
+the territorial aggrandizement sought by Hungary, but only such
+a supremacy as might prevent the development of any dangerous
+political or commercial competitor on the eastern Adriatic.
+Hungary had also its partisans; for in the Dalmatian city-states,
+like those of Greece and Italy, there were almost invariably
+two jealous political factions, each ready to oppose any measure
+advocated by its antagonist. The origin of this division seems
+here to have been economic. The farmers and the merchants
+who traded in the interior naturally favoured Hungary, their
+most powerful neighbour on land; while the seafaring community
+looked to Venice as mistress of the Adriatic. In return
+for protection, the cities often furnished a contingent to the
+army or navy of their suzerain, and sometimes paid tribute
+either in money or in kind. Arbe, for example, annually paid
+ten pounds of silk or five pounds of gold to Venice. The citizens
+clung to their municipal privileges, which were reaffirmed after
+the conquest of Dalmatia in 1102-1105 by Coloman of Hungary.
+Subject to the royal assent they might elect their own chief
+magistrate, bishop and judges. Their Roman law remained
+valid. They were even permitted to conclude separate alliances.
+No alien, not even a Hungarian, could reside in a city where he
+was unwelcome; and the man who disliked Hungarian dominion
+could emigrate with all his household and property. In lieu of
+tribute, the revenue from customs was in some cases shared
+equally by the king, chief magistrate, bishop and municipality.
+These rights and the analogous privileges granted by Venice
+were, however, too frequently infringed, Hungarian garrisons
+being quartered on unwilling towns, while Venice interfered
+with trade, with the appointment of bishops, or with the tenure
+of communal domains. Consequently the Dalmatians remained
+loyal only while it suited their interests, and insurrections
+frequently occurred. Even in Zara four outbreaks are recorded
+between 1180 and 1345, although Zara was treated with special
+consideration by its Venetian masters, who regarded its possession
+as essential to their maritime ascendancy. The doubtful
+allegiance of the Dalmatians tended to protract the struggle
+between Venice and Hungary, which was further complicated by
+internal discord due largely to the spread of the Bogomil heresy;
+and by many outside influences, such as the vague suzerainty
+still enjoyed by the Eastern emperors during the 12th century;
+the assistance rendered to Venice by the armies of the Fourth
+Crusade in 1202; and the Tartar invasion of Dalmatia forty years
+later (see Traù). The Slavs were no longer regarded as a
+hostile race, but the power of certain Croatian magnates, notably
+the counts of Bribir, was from time to time supreme in the
+northern districts (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Croatia-Slavonia</a></span>); and Stephen
+Tvrtko, the founder of the Bosnian kingdom, was able in 1389
+to annex the whole Adriatic littoral between Cattaro and Fiume,
+except Venetian Zara and his own independent ally, Ragusa (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Bosnia and Herzegovina</a></span>). Finally, the rapid decline of Bosnia,
+and of Hungary itself when assailed by the Turks, rendered easy
+the success of Venice; and in 1420 the whole of Dalmatia, except
+Almissa, which yielded in 1444, and Ragusa, which preserved
+its freedom, either submitted or was conquered. Many cities
+welcomed the change with its promise of tranquillity.</p>
+
+<p><i>Venetian and Turkish Rule</i>, 1420-1797.&mdash;An interval of peace
+ensued, but meanwhile the Turkish advance continued. Constantinople
+fell in 1453, Servia in 1459, Bosnia in 1463 and
+Herzegovina in 1483. Thus the Venetian and Ottoman frontiers
+met; border wars were incessant; Ragusa sought safety in
+friendship with the invaders. In 1508 the hostile league of
+Cambrai compelled Venice to withdraw its garrison for home
+service, and after the overthrow of Hungary at Mohács in 1526
+the Turks were able easily to conquer the greater part of Dalmatia.
+The peace of 1540 left only the maritime cities to
+Venice, the interior forming a Turkish province, governed from
+the fortress of Clissa by a <i>Sanjakbeg</i>, or administrator with
+military powers. Christian Slavs from the neighbouring lands
+now thronged to the towns, outnumbering the Italian population
+and introducing their own language, but falling under the
+influence of the Roman Catholic Church. The pirate community
+of the Uskoks (q.v.) had originally been a band of these fugitives;
+its exploits contributed to a renewal of war between Venice and
+Turkey (1571-1573). An extremely curious picture of contemporary
+manners is presented by the Venetian agents,<a name="fa4b" id="fa4b" href="#ft4b"><span class="sp">4</span></a> whose
+reports on this war resemble some knightly chronicle of the
+middle ages, full of single combats, tournaments and other
+chivalrous adventures. They also show clearly that the Dalmatian
+levies far surpassed the Italian mercenaries in skill and
+courage. Many of these troops served abroad; at Lepanto, for
+example, in 1571, a Dalmatian squadron assisted the allied fleets
+of Spain, Venice, Austria and the Papal States to crush the
+Turkish navy. A fresh war broke out in 1645, lasting intermittently
+until 1699, when the peace of Carlowitz gave the
+whole of Dalmatia to Venice, including the coast of Herzegovina,
+but excluding the domains of Ragusa and the protecting band of
+Ottoman territory which surrounded them. After further fighting
+this delimitation was confirmed in 1718 by the treaty of
+Passarowitz; and it remains valid, though modified by the
+destruction of Ragusan liberty and the substitution of Austria-Hungary
+for Venice and Turkey.</p>
+
+<p>The intellectual life of Dalmatia during the 15th, 16th and
+17th centuries reached a higher level than any attained by the
+purely Slavonic peoples of the Balkan Peninsula. Its chief
+monuments are described elsewhere,&mdash;the work of the Ragusan
+poets and historians as a part of Servian literature, the scientific
+achievements of R. G. Boscovich and Marcantonio de Dominis
+in separate biographies. Architecture and art generally have
+been discussed above. But this intellectual development was
+the work of a small and opulent minority in all the cities except
+Ragusa. Popular education was neglected; Zara had no
+printing-press until 1796; Venetian Dalmatia possessed only
+one public school, and that an ecclesiastical seminary; and
+even the sons of the rich, though free to visit the universities
+of Italy, France, Holland and England, ran the risk of exile or
+worse punishment if they brought home too liberal a culture.
+Poorer students learned what they could from the clergy, and the
+peasantry were wholly illiterate. Although the secular power of
+the Church was strictly limited, the country was overrun by
+ecclesiastics. When Fortis visited the island of Arbe in the
+18th century, he found a population of 3000, mostly fishermen,
+contributing to the stipends of sixty priests. There were also
+three monasteries and three nunneries. Heavy taxes, the salt
+monopoly, reckless destruction of timber, and a deliberate
+attempt to ruin the oil and silk industries, were among the means
+by which Venice prevented competition with its own trade.
+Although justice was fairly well administered and some show
+of municipal autonomy conceded, the right of electing a chief
+magistrate had been withheld after 1420; and the Grand Council
+or Senate of each city, losing its original democratic character,
+had degenerated into a mere tool of the resident Venetian agents
+(<i>provveditori</i>), officials who held their post for thirty-two months
+and were subject to little effective control. Nevertheless, 150
+years of war against the common Turkish enemy had drawn the
+Venetians and their subjects closely together, and the loyalty of
+the Dalmatian soldiers and sailors abroad, if not of their fellow-citizens
+at home, rests beyond doubt.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dalmatia after</i> 1797.&mdash;After the fall of the Venetian republic
+in 1797, the treaty of Campo Formio gave Dalmatia to Austria.
+The republics of Ragusa and Poglizza retained their independence,
+and Ragusa grew rich by its neutrality during the earlier
+Napoleonic wars. By the peace of Pressburg in 1805 the country
+was handed over to France, but its occupation was ineffectually
+contested by a Russian force which seized the Bocche di Cattaro
+and induced the Montenegrins to render aid. Poglizza was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page776" id="page776"></a>776</span>
+deprived of its independence by Napoleon in 1807, Ragusa
+in 1808. In 1809 the French troops were withdrawn, but in
+the same year Dalmatia was restored to France and united to
+the Illyrian kingdom by the treaty of Vienna. A British naval
+force under Captain Hoste, after a successful engagement with
+a small French squadron off Lissa, occupied the islands of
+Curzola, Lesina and Lagosta from 1812 to 1815, and established
+a considerable overland trade through Dalmatia, Austria and
+Germany. The allied British and Austrian forces drove out
+the last French garrison in 1814, and in 1815 Dalmatia was
+finally incorporated in the Austro-Hungarian empire, with which
+its history has since been identified. Its subsequent tranquillity
+has only been disturbed by the ineffectual risings of
+1869 and 1881-1882, which took place near Cattaro (q.v.). For
+an account of the development of Croatian nationalism among
+the Dalmatians, during the 19th and 20th centuries, see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Croatia-Slavonia</a></span>.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;A minute and accurate account of Dalmatian
+history, art (especially architecture), antiquities and topography, is
+given by T. G. Jackson, in <i>Dalmatia, the Quarnero and Istria</i> (Oxford,
+1887), (3 vols. illustrated). E. A. Freeman, <i>Subject and Neighbour
+Lands of Venice</i> (London, 1881), and G. Modrich, <i>La Dalmazia</i>
+(Turin, 1892), describe the chief towns, their history and antiquities.
+Much miscellaneous information is contained in the following mainly
+topographical works:&mdash;P. Bauron, <i>Les Rives illyriennes</i> (Paris,
+1888); Sir A. A. Paton, <i>Highlands and Islands of the Adriatic</i>
+(London, 1849); Sir J. G. Wilkinson, <i>Dalmatia and Montenegro</i>
+(London, 1840); A. Fortis, <i>Travels into Dalmatia</i> (London, 1778);
+and the periodicals, <i>Rivista Dalmatica</i> (Zara, 1899, &amp;c.), and <i>Annuario
+Dalmatico</i> (Zara, 1884, &amp;c.). The best maps are those of the
+Austrian General Staff and Vincenzo de Haardt&rsquo;s <i>Zemljovid Kraljevine
+Dalmacije</i> (Zara, 1892). See also for trade, the Annual British
+Consular Reports; for sport, &ldquo;Snaffle,&rdquo; <i>In the Land of the Bora</i>
+(London, 1897); for Roman and pre-Roman antiquities, R. Munro,
+<i>Bosnia-Herzegovina and Dalmatia</i> (Edinburgh, 1904). Besides the
+works mentioned above, and those by Farlatus, Makushev, Miklosich,
+Theiner, Shafarik, Orbini and du Cange, which are quoted under
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Bosnia and Herzegovina</a></span>, the chief authority for Dalmatian
+history is G. Lucio (Lucius of Traù), <i>De regno Dalmatiae et Croatiae,
+a gentis origine ad annum 1480</i> (Amsterdam, 1666). To this edition
+are appended the works of the Presbyter Diocleas, Thomas of
+Spalato and other native chroniclers from the 12th century onwards.
+An Italian translation, omitting the appendix, was published at
+Trieste in 1892, entitled <i>Storia del Regno di Dalmatia e di Croazia</i>,
+and edited by Luigi Cesare. Lucio&rsquo;s work is singularly trustworthy
+and scientific. See also P. Pisani, <i>La Dalmatie de 1797 à 1815</i> (Paris,
+1893).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(K. G. J.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1b" id="ft1b" href="#fa1b"><span class="fn">1</span></a> This arrangement is based on the terms of the peace of Carlowitz
+1699 (articles IX. and XI. of the Turco-Venetian Treaty). It is due
+to the commercial and maritime rivalry between Venice and Ragusa.
+The Ragusans bribed the Turkish envoys at Carlowitz to stipulate
+for a double extension of the Ottoman dominions down to the
+Adriatic; and thus the Ragusan lands, which otherwise would have
+bordered upon the Dalmatian possessions of Venice, were surrounded
+by neutral territory.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2b" id="ft2b" href="#fa2b"><span class="fn">2</span></a> These figures, taken from the Austrian official returns, include
+the population of the entire commune, not merely the urban residents.
+Only in Zara, Spalato, Sebenico and Ragusa, do the actual
+townsfolk number more than 1000.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3b" id="ft3b" href="#fa3b"><span class="fn">3</span></a> Also written <i>Dalminium</i>, <i>Deminium</i>, and <i>Delmis</i>. Thomas of
+Spalato (<i>c.</i> 1200-1250) mentions that the site of Delminium had been
+forgotten in his time, although certain ancient walls among the
+mountains were believed to be its ruins. It has been variously
+identified, by modern archaeologists, with Almissa, on the coast,
+Dalen, in the Herzegovina, Duvno, near Sinj, and Gardun, in the
+same locality. It was evidently a stronghold of considerable size
+and importance, and Appian (<i>De bellis Illyricis</i>) alludes to its almost
+impregnable fortifications.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4b" id="ft4b" href="#fa4b"><span class="fn">4</span></a> Long extracts from these reports or diaries are published by
+Wilkinson, <i>Dalmatia and Montenegro</i> (London, 1840), ii. 297-350.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALMATIC<a name="ar42" id="ar42"></a></span> (Lat. <i>dalmatica</i>, <i>tunica dalmatica</i>), a liturgical
+vestment of the Western Church, proper to deacons, as the
+tunicle (<i>tunicella</i>) is to subdeacons. Dalmatic and tunicle are
+now, however, practically identical in shape and size; though,
+strictly, the latter should be somewhat smaller and with narrower
+arms. In most countries, e.g. England, France, Spain and
+Germany, dalmatic and tunicle are now no longer tunics, but
+scapular-like cloaks, with an opening for the head to pass through
+and square lappets falling from the shoulder over the upper
+part of the arm; in Italy, on the other hand, though open up
+the side, they still have regular sleeves and are essentially tunics.
+The most characteristic ornament of the dalmatic and tunicle
+is the vertical stripes running from the shoulder to the lower
+hem, these being connected by a cross-band, the position of
+which differs in various countries (see figs. 3, 4). Less essential
+are the orphreys on the hem of the arms and the fringes along
+the slits at the sides and the lower hem. The tassels hanging
+from either shoulder at the back (see fig. 6), formerly very
+much favoured, have now largely gone out of use.</p>
+
+<table class="flt" style="float: right; width: 200px;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:146px; height:413px" src="images/img776.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption1"><span class="sc">Fig. 1.</span>&mdash;Deacon in dalmatic, apparelled amice and alb.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>The <i>dalmatica</i>, which originated&mdash;as its name implies&mdash;in
+Dalmatia, came into fashion in the Roman world in the 2nd
+century A.D. It was a loose tunic with very wide sleeves, and
+was worn over the <i>tunica alba</i> by the better class of citizens
+(see. fig. 2). According to the <i>Liber pontificalis</i> (ed. Duchesne,
+l. 171) the dalmatic was first introduced as a vestment in public
+worship by Pope Silvester I. (314-335), who ordered it to be
+worn by the deacons; but Braun (<i>Liturg. Gewandung</i>, p. 250)
+thinks that it was probably in use by the popes themselves so
+early as the 3rd century, since St Cyprian (d. 258) is mentioned
+as wearing it when he went to his death. If this be so, it was
+probably given to the Roman deacons to distinguish them
+from the other clergy and to mark their special relations to
+the pope. However this may be, the dalmatic remained for
+centuries the vestment distinctive of the pope and his deacons,
+and&mdash;according at least to the view held at Rome&mdash;could be
+worn by other clergy only by special concession of the pope.
+Thus Pope Symmachus (498-514) granted the right to wear it
+to the deacons of Bishop Caesarius of Arles; and so late as
+757 Pope Stephen II. gave permission to Fulrad, abbot of St
+Denis, to be assisted by six deacons at mass, and these are
+empowered to wear &ldquo;the robe of honour of the dalmatic.&rdquo;
+How far, however, this rule was strictly observed, and what was
+the relation of the Roman dalmatic to the diaconal alba and
+subdiaconal tunica, which were in liturgical use in Gaul and
+Spain so early as the 6th century, are moot points (see Braun,
+p. 252). The dalmatic was in general use at the beginning of the
+9th century, partly as a result of the Carolingian reforms, which
+established the Roman model in western Europe; but it continued
+to be granted by the popes to distinguished ecclesiastics
+not otherwise entitled to wear it, e.g. to abbots or to the cardinal
+priests of important cathedrals. So far as the records show, Pope
+John XIII. (965-972) was the first to bestow the right to wear
+the dalmatic on an abbot, and Pope Benedict VII. the first to
+grant it to a cardinal priest of a foreign
+cathedral (975). The present rule was
+firmly established by the 11th century.
+According to the actual use of the Roman
+Catholic Church dalmatic and tunicle are
+worn by deacon and subdeacon when
+assisting at High Mass, and at solemn
+processions and benedictions. They are,
+however, traditionally vestments symbolical
+of joy (the bishop in placing the
+dalmatic on the newly ordained deacon
+says:&mdash;&ldquo;May the Lord clothe thee in the
+tunic of joy and the garment of rejoicing&rdquo;),
+and they are therefore not worn
+during seasons of fasting and penitence or
+functions connected with these, the folded
+chasuble (<i>paenula plicata</i>) being substituted
+(see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Chasuble</a></span>). Dalmatic and tunicle
+are never worn by priests, as priests, but
+both are worn by bishops under the
+chasuble (never under the cope) and also
+by those prelates, not being bishops, to
+whom the pope has conceded the right to
+wear the episcopal vestments.</p>
+
+<p>In England at the Reformation the
+dalmatic ultimately shared the fate of the chasuble and other
+mass vestments. It was, however, certainly one of the &ldquo;ornaments
+of the minister&rdquo; in the second year of Edward VI., the
+rubric in the office for Holy Communion directing the priest&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;helpers&rdquo; to wear &ldquo;albes with tunacles.&rdquo; In many Anglican
+churches it has therefore been restored, as a result of the
+ritual revival of the 19th century, it being claimed that its use
+is obligatory under the &ldquo;ornaments rubric&rdquo; of the Book of
+Common Prayer (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Vestments</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>In the Eastern churches the only vestment that has any true
+analogy with the dalmatic or liturgical upper tunic is the
+<i>sakkos</i>, the tunic worn by deacons and subdeacons over their
+everyday clothes being the equivalent of the Western alb (q.v.).
+The sakkos, which, as a liturgical vestment, first appears in the
+12th century as peculiar to patriarchs, is now a scapular-like
+robe very similar to the modern dalmatic (see fig. 5). Its origin
+is almost certainly the richly embroidered dalmatic that formed
+part of the consular insignia, which under the name of sakkos
+became a robe of state special to the emperors. It is clear, then,
+that this vestment can only have been assumed with the emperor&rsquo;s
+permission; and Braun suggests (p. 305) that its use was granted
+to the patriarchs, after the completion of the schism of East and
+West, in order &ldquo;in some sort to give them the character, in
+outward appearance as well, of popes of the East.&rdquo; Its use is
+confined to the Greek rite. In the Greek and Greek-Melchite
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page777" id="page777"></a>777</span>
+churches it is confined to the patriarchs and metropolitans;
+in the Russian, Ruthenian and Bulgarian churches it is worn by
+all bishops. Unlike the practice of the Latin church, it is not
+worn under, but has replaced the phelonion (chasuble).</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 noind f90 sc">Plate I.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:753px; height:555px" src="images/img776a.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 2.</span>&mdash;TUNIC OF LINEN, WOVEN WITH BANDS OF PURPLE WOOL EMBROIDERED WITH WHITE FLAX.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl f80">From the tombs at Akhmim. Egypto-Roman; 1st to 4th century. (In the Victoria and Albert Museum.)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:626px; height:554px" src="images/img776b.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 3.</span>&mdash;BACK OF A DALMATIC OF STAMPED GREEN WOOLLEN VELVET: THE ORPHREYS AND APPARELS
+ARE OF EMBROIDERED SILK VELVET.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl f80">The two figures on the cross-band or apparel represent St. Gregory the Great and St. Augustine. The shields of arms are for the
+dukes of Jülich and Berg, counts of Ravensberg, and for the electors of Bavaria. Said to have come from the church of St. Severin,
+Cologne. German (Cologne); second half of 15th century. (In the Victoria and Albert Museum.)</td></tr></table>
+
+<p class="pt2 noind f90 sc">Plate II.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:851px; height:659px" src="images/img776c.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 4.</span>&mdash;DALMATIC OF WHITE SATIN EMRROIDERED WITH COLOURED SILKS AND SILVER-GILT AND SILVER THREAD.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl f80">Spanish; early 17th century. (In the Victoria and Albert Museum.)</td></tr></table>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:342px; height:432px" src="images/img776d.jpg" alt="" /></td>
+<td class="figcenter"><img style="width:473px; height:442px" src="images/img776e.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 5.</span>&mdash;GREEK SAKKOS, OF RED SATIN EMBROIDERED
+WITH SILVER-GILT AND
+SILVER THREAD WITH SILK.</td>
+<td class="caption"><span class="sc">Fig. 6.</span>&mdash;DALMATIC OF POPE PIUS V.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl f80">It has the names and arms of two archbishops. 18th
+century. (In the Victoria and Albert Museum.)</td>
+<td class="tcl f80">An early example of the modern Roman type. Roman; 16th century.
+Preserved at Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome. From a photograph taken by
+Father J. Braun (in <i>Die liturgische Gewandung</i>), by permission of B. Herder.</td></tr></table>
+
+<p class="pt2">A silk dalmatic forms one (the undermost) of the English
+coronation robes. Its use would seem to have been borrowed,
+not from the robes of the Eastern emperors, but from the
+church, and to symbolize with the other robes the quasi-sacerdotal
+character of the kingship (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Coronation</a></span>). The
+magnificent so-called dalmatic of Charlemagne, preserved at
+Rome (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Embroidery</a></span>), is really a Greek sakkos.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Joseph Braun, S.J., <i>Die liturgische Gewandung</i> (Freiburg im
+Breisgau, 1907), pp. 247-305. For further references and illustrations
+see the article <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Vestments</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. A. P.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALMELLINGTON,<a name="ar43" id="ar43"></a></span> a village of Ayrshire, Scotland, 15 m. S.E.
+of Ayr by a branch line, of which it is the terminus, of the
+Glasgow &amp; South-Western railway. Pop. (1901) 1448. The
+district is rich in minerals&mdash;coal, ironstone, sandstone and
+limestone. Though the place is of great antiquity, the Roman
+road running near it, few remains of any interest exist. It was,
+however, a centre of activity in the Covenanting times.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALOU, JULES<a name="ar44" id="ar44"></a></span> (1838-1902), French sculptor, was the pupil
+of Carpeaux and Duret, and combined the vivacity and richness
+of the one with the academic purity and scholarship of the other.
+He is one of the most brilliant virtuosos of the French school,
+admirable alike in taste, execution and arrangement. He first
+exhibited at the Salon in 1867, but when in 1871 the troubles of
+the Commune broke out in Paris, he took refuge in England,
+where he rapidly made a name through his appointment at
+South Kensington. Here he laid the foundation of that great
+improvement which resulted in the development of the modern
+British school of sculpture, and at the same time executed a
+remarkable series of terra-cotta statuettes and groups, such as
+&ldquo;A French Peasant Woman&rdquo; (of which a bronze version under
+the title of &ldquo;Maternity&rdquo; is erected outside the Royal Exchange),
+the group of two Boulogne women called &ldquo;The Reader&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;A Woman of Boulogne telling her Beads.&rdquo; He returned to
+France in 1879 and produced a number of masterpieces. His
+great relief of &ldquo;Mirabeau replying to M. de Dreux-Brézé,&rdquo;
+exhibited in 1883 and now at the Palais Bourbon, and the highly
+decorative panel, &ldquo;Triumph of the Republic,&rdquo; were followed in
+1885 by &ldquo;The Procession of Silenus.&rdquo; For the city of Paris
+he executed his most elaborate and splendid achievement, the
+vast monument, &ldquo;The Triumph of the Republic,&rdquo; erected, after
+twenty years&rsquo; work, in the Place de la Nation, showing a symbolical
+figure of the Republic, aloft on her car, drawn by lions
+led by Liberty, attended by Labour and Justice, and followed by
+Peace. It is somewhat in the taste of the Louis XIV. period,
+ornate, but exquisite in every detail. Within a few days there
+was also inaugurated his great &ldquo;Monument to Alphand&rdquo; (1899),
+which almost equalled in the success achieved the monument to
+Delacroix in the Luxembourg Gardens. Dalou, who gained the
+<i>Grand Prix</i> of the International exhibition of 1889, and was an
+officer of the Legion of Honour, was one of the founders of the
+New Salon (<i>Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts</i>), and was the first
+president of the sculpture section. In portraiture, whether
+statues or busts, his work is not less remarkable.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALRADIAN,<a name="ar45" id="ar45"></a></span> in geology, a series of metamorphic rocks,
+typically developed in the high ground which lies E. and S.
+of the Great Glen of Scotland. This was the old Celtic region of
+Dalradia, and in 1891 Sir A. Geikie proposed the name Dalradian
+as a convenient provisional designation for the complicated set
+of rocks to which it is difficult to assign a definite position in
+the stratigraphical sequence (<i>Q.J.G.S.</i> 47, p. 75). In Sir A.
+Geikie&rsquo;s words, &ldquo;they consist in large proportion of altered
+sedimentary strata, now found in the form of mica-schist,
+graphite-schist, andalusite-schist, phyllite, schistose grit, greywacke
+and conglomerate, quartzite, limestone and other
+rocks, together with epidiorites, chlorite-schists, hornblende
+schists and other allied varieties, which probably mark sills,
+lava-sheets or beds of tuff, intercalated among the sediments.
+The total thickness of this assemblage of rocks must be many
+thousand feet.&rdquo; The Dalradian series includes the &ldquo;Eastern or
+Younger schists&rdquo; of eastern Sutherland, Ross-shire and Inverness-shire&mdash;the
+Moine gneiss, &amp;c.&mdash;as well as the metamorphosed
+sedimentary and eruptive rocks of the central, eastern and
+south-western Highlands. The series has been traced into the
+north-western counties of Ireland. The whole of the Dalradian
+complex has suffered intense crushing and thrusting.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Pre-Cambrian</a></span>; also J. B. Hill, <i>Q.J.G.S.</i>, 1899, 55, and G.
+Barrow, <i>loc. cit.</i>, 1901, 57, and the <i>Annual Reports and Summaries
+of Progress of the Geological Survey of the United Kingdom</i> from 1893
+onwards.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALRIADA,<a name="ar46" id="ar46"></a></span> the name of two ancient Gaelic kingdoms, one
+in Ireland and the other in Scotland. The name means the
+home of the descendants of Riada. Irish Dalriada was the
+district which now forms the northern part of county Antrim,
+and from which about A.D. 500 some emigrants crossed over to
+Scotland, and founded in Argyllshire the Scottish kingdom of
+Dalriada. For a time Scottish Dalriada appears to have been
+dependent upon Irish Dalriada, but about 575 King Aidan
+secured its independence. One of Aidan&rsquo;s successors, Kenneth,
+became king of the Picts about 843, and gradually the name
+Dalriada both in Ireland and Scotland fell into disuse.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See W. F. Skene, <i>Celtic Scotland</i> (Edinburgh, 1876-1880).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALRY<a name="ar47" id="ar47"></a></span> (Gaelic, &ldquo;the field of the king&rdquo;), a mining and
+manufacturing town of Ayrshire, Scotland, on the Garnock,
+23¼ m. S.W. of Glasgow, by the Glasgow &amp; South-Western
+railway. Pop. (1901) 5316. The public buildings include the
+library and reading-room, the assembly rooms, Davidshill
+hospital, Temperance hall and night asylum. There is a public
+park. The industries consist of woollen factories, worsted
+spinning, box-, cabinet-, coke- and brick-making, machine-knitting,
+currying and the manufacture of aerated waters.
+Coal and iron are found, but mining is not extensively pursued.
+In the vicinity are the iron works of Blair and Glengarnock,
+and a curious stalactite cave, known as Elf House, 30 ft. high
+and about 200 ft. long, offering some resemblance to a pointed
+aisle. Rye Water flows into the Garnock close to the town.
+Captain Thomas Crawford of Jordanhill (1530-1603), the captor
+of Dumbarton Castle, spent the closing years of his life at Dalry,
+where a considerable estate had been granted to him.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALTON, JOHN<a name="ar48" id="ar48"></a></span> (1766-1844), English chemist and physicist,
+was born about the 6th of September 1766 at Eaglesfield, near
+Cockermouth in Cumberland. His father, Joseph Dalton, was
+a weaver in poor circumstances, who, with his wife (Deborah
+Greenup), belonged to the Society of Friends; they had three
+children&mdash;Jonathan, John and Mary. John received his early
+education from his father and from John Fletcher, teacher of
+the Quakers&rsquo; school at Eaglesfield, on whose retirement in 1778
+he himself started teaching. This youthful venture was not
+successful, the amount he received in fees being only about
+five shillings a week, and after two years he took to farm work.
+But he had received some instruction in mathematics from
+a distant relative, Elihu Robinson, and in 1781 he left his native
+village to become assistant to his cousin George Bewley who
+kept a school at Kendal. There he passed the next twelve years,
+becoming in 1785, through the retirement of his cousin, joint
+manager of the school with his elder brother Jonathan. About
+1790 he seems to have thought of taking up law or medicine,
+but his projects met with no encouragement from his relatives and
+he remained at Kendal till, in the spring of 1793, he moved to
+Manchester, where he spent the rest of his life. Mainly through
+John Gough (1757-1825), a blind philosopher to whose aid he
+owed much of his scientific knowledge, he was appointed teacher
+of mathematics and natural philosophy at the New College in
+Moseley Street (in 1880 transferred to Manchester College,
+Oxford), and that position he retained until the removal of the
+college to York in 1799, when he became a &ldquo;public and private
+teacher of mathematics and chemistry.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>During his residence in Kendal, Dalton had contributed solutions
+of problems and questions on various subjects to the
+<i>Gentlemen&rsquo;s</i> and <i>Ladies&rsquo; Diaries</i>, and in 1787 he began to keep
+a meteorological diary in which during the succeeding fifty-seven
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page778" id="page778"></a>778</span>
+years he entered more than 200,000 observations. His first
+separate publication was <i>Meteorological Observations and Essays</i>
+(1793), which contained the germs of several of his later discoveries;
+but in spite of the originality of its matter, the book
+met with only a limited sale. Another work by him, <i>Elements
+of English Grammar</i>, was published in 1801. In 1794 he was
+elected a member of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical
+Society, and a few weeks after election he communicated his
+first paper on &ldquo;Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of
+colours,&rdquo; in which he gave the earliest account of the optical
+peculiarity known as Daltonism or colour-blindness, and summed
+up its characteristics as observed in himself and others. Besides
+the blue and purple of the spectrum he was able to recognize
+only one colour, yellow, or, as he says in his paper, &ldquo;that part
+of the image which others call red appears to me little more
+than a shade or defect of light; after that the orange, yellow
+and green seem one colour which descends pretty uniformly
+from an intense to a rare yellow, making what I should call
+different shades of yellow.&rdquo; This paper was followed by many
+others on diverse topics&mdash;on rain and dew and the origin of
+springs, on heat, the colour of the sky, steam, the auxiliary
+verbs and participles of the English language and the reflection
+and refraction of light. In 1800 he became a secretary of the
+society, and in the following year he presented the important
+paper or series of papers, entitled &ldquo;Experimental Essays on the
+constitution of mixed gases; on the force of steam or vapour
+of water and other liquids in different temperatures, both in
+Torricellian vacuum and in air; on evaporation; and on the
+expansion of gases by heat.&rdquo; The second of these essays opens
+with the striking remark, &ldquo;There can scarcely be a doubt entertained
+respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids of whatever
+kind, into liquids; and we ought not to despair of effecting
+it in low temperatures and by strong pressures exerted upon
+the unmixed gases&rdquo;; further, after describing experiments
+to ascertain the tension of aqueous vapour at different points
+between 32° and 212° F., he concludes, from observations on
+the vapour of six different liquids, &ldquo;that the variation of the
+force of vapour from all liquids is the same for the same variation
+of temperature, reckoning from vapour of any given force.&rdquo;
+In the fourth essay he remarks, &ldquo;I see no sufficient reason why
+we may not conclude that all elastic fluids under the same
+pressure expand equally by heat and that for any given expansion
+of mercury, the corresponding expansion of air is proportionally
+something less, the higher the temperature.... It seems,
+therefore, that general laws respecting the absolute quantity
+and the nature of heat are more likely to be derived from elastic
+fluids than from other substances.&rdquo; He thus enunciated the
+law of the expansion of gases, stated some months later by
+Gay-Lussac. In the two or three years following the reading
+of these essays, he published several papers on similar topics,
+that on the &ldquo;Absorption of gases by water and other liquids&rdquo;
+(1803), containing his &ldquo;Law of partial pressures.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the most important of all Dalton&rsquo;s investigations are
+those concerned with the Atomic Theory in chemistry, with
+which his name is inseparably associated. It has been supposed
+that this theory was suggested to him either by researches on
+olefiant gas and carburetted hydrogen or by analysis of &ldquo;protoxide
+and deutoxide of azote,&rdquo; both views resting on the
+authority of Dr Thomas Thomson (1773-1852), professor of
+chemistry in Glasgow university. But from a study of Dalton&rsquo;s
+own MS. laboratory notebooks, discovered in the rooms of the
+Manchester society, Roscoe and Harden (<i>A New View of the
+Origin of Dalton&rsquo;s Atomic Theory</i>, 1896) conclude that so far
+from Dalton being led to the idea that chemical combination
+consists in the approximation of atoms of definite and characteristic
+weight by his search for an explanation of the law of combination
+in multiple proportions, the idea of atomic structure
+arose in his mind as a purely physical conception, forced upon
+him by study of the physical properties of the atmosphere and
+other gases. The first published indications of this idea are to
+be found at the end of his paper on the &ldquo;Absorption of gases&rdquo;
+already mentioned, which was read on the 21st of October 1803
+though not published till 1805. Here he says: &ldquo;Why does not
+water admit its bulk of every kind of gas alike? This question
+I have duly considered, and though I am not able to satisfy
+myself completely I am nearly persuaded that the circumstance
+depends on the weight and number of the ultimate particles of
+the several gases.&rdquo; He proceeds to give what has been quoted
+as his first table of atomic weights, but on p. 248 of his laboratory
+notebooks for 1802-1804, under the date 6th of September 1803,
+there is an earlier one in which he sets forth the relative weights
+of the ultimate atoms of a number of substances, derived from
+analysis of water, ammonia, carbon-dioxide, &amp;c. by chemists of
+the time. It appears, then, that, confronted with the &ldquo;problem
+of ascertaining the relative diameter of the particles of which,
+he was convinced, all gases were made up, he had recourse to
+the results of chemical analysis. Assisted by the assumption
+that combination always takes place in the simplest possible
+way, he thus arrived at the idea that chemical combination takes
+place between particles of different weights, and this it was
+which differentiated his theory from the historic speculations
+of the Greeks. The extension of this idea to substances in general
+necessarily led him to the law of combination in multiple
+proportions, and the comparison with experiment brilliantly
+confirmed the truth of his deduction&rdquo; (<i>A New View, &amp;c.</i>,
+pp. 50, 51). It may be noted that in a paper on the &ldquo;Proportion
+of the gases or elastic fluids constituting the atmosphere,&rdquo; read
+by him in November 1802, the law of multiple proportions
+appears to be anticipated in the words&mdash;&ldquo;The elements of
+oxygen may combine with a certain portion of nitrous gas or
+with twice that portion, but with no intermediate quantity,&rdquo;
+but there is reason to suspect that this sentence was added
+some time after the reading of the paper, which was not published
+till 1805.</p>
+
+<p>Dalton communicated his atomic theory to Dr Thomson, who
+by consent included an outline of it in the third edition of his
+<i>System of Chemistry</i> (1807), and Dalton gave a further account of
+it in the first part of the first volume of his <i>New System of Chemical
+Philosophy</i> (1808). The second part of this volume appeared
+in 1810, but the first part of the second volume was not issued
+till 1827, though the printing of it began in 1817. This delay
+is not explained by any excess of care in preparation, for much
+of the matter was out of date and the appendix giving the author&rsquo;s
+latest views is the only portion of special interest. The second
+part of vol. ii. never appeared.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether Dalton contributed 116 memoirs to the Manchester
+Literary and Philosophical Society, of which from 1817 till his
+death he was the president. Of these the earlier are the most
+important. In one of them, read in 1814, he explains the
+principles of volumetric analysis, in which he was one of the
+earliest workers. In 1840 a paper on the phosphates and
+arsenates, which was clearly unworthy of him, was refused by
+the Royal Society, and he was so incensed that he published it
+himself. He took the same course soon afterwards with four
+other papers, two of which&mdash;&ldquo;On the quantity of acids, bases
+and salts in different varieties of salts&rdquo; and &ldquo;On a new and easy
+method of analysing sugar,&rdquo; contain his discovery, regarded
+by him as second in importance only to the atomic theory, that
+certain anhydrous salts when dissolved in water cause no increase
+in its volume, his inference being that the &ldquo;salt enters into the
+pores of the water.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As an investigator, Dalton was content with rough and inaccurate
+instruments, though better ones were readily attainable.
+Sir Humphry Davy described him as a &ldquo;very coarse experimenter,&rdquo;
+who &ldquo;almost always found the results he required,
+trusting to his head rather than his hands.&rdquo; In the preface to
+the second part of vol. i. of his <i>New System</i> he says he had so
+often been misled by taking for granted the results of others
+that he &ldquo;determined to write as little as possible but what I can
+attest by my own experience,&rdquo; but this independence he carried
+so far that it sometimes resembled lack of receptivity. Thus
+he distrusted, and probably never fully accepted, Gay-Lussac&rsquo;s
+conclusions as to the combining volumes of gases; he held
+peculiar and quite unfounded views about chlorine, even after
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page779" id="page779"></a>779</span>
+its elementary character had been settled by Davy; he persisted
+in using the atomic weights he himself had adopted, even when
+they had been superseded by the more accurate determinations
+of other chemists; and he always objected to the chemical
+notation devised by J. J. Berzelius, although by common consent
+it was much simpler and more convenient than his cumbersome
+system of circular symbols. His library, he was once heard to
+declare, he could carry on his back, yet he had not read half the
+books it contained.</p>
+
+<p>Before he had propounded the atomic theory he had already
+attained a considerable scientific reputation. In 1804 he was
+chosen to give a course of lectures on natural philosophy at the
+Royal Institution in London, where he delivered another course
+in 1809-1810. But he was deficient, it would seem, in the
+qualities that make an attractive lecturer, being harsh and
+indistinct in voice, ineffective in the treatment of his subject,
+and &ldquo;singularly wanting in the language and power of illustration.&rdquo;
+In 1810 he was asked by Davy to offer himself as a
+candidate for the fellowship of the Royal Society, but declined,
+possibly for pecuniary reasons; but in 1822 he was proposed
+without his knowledge, and on election paid the usual fee. Six
+years previously he had been made a corresponding member of
+the French Academy of Sciences, and in 1830 he was elected as
+one of its eight foreign associates in place of Davy. In 1833 Lord
+Grey&rsquo;s government conferred on him a pension of £150, raised in
+1836 to £300. Never married, though there is evidence that he
+delighted in the society of women of education and refinement,
+he lived for more than a quarter of a century with his friend
+the Rev. W. Johns (1771-1845), in George Street, Manchester,
+where his daily round of laboratory work and tuition was broken
+only by annual excursions to the Lake district and occasional
+visits to London, &ldquo;a surprising place and well worth one&rsquo;s while
+to see once, but the most disagreeable place on earth for one of a
+contemplative turn to reside in constantly.&rdquo; In 1822 he paid a
+short visit to Paris, where he met many of the distinguished men
+of science then living in the French capital, and he attended
+several of the earlier meetings of the British Association at York,
+Oxford, Dublin and Bristol. Into society he rarely went, and
+his only amusement was a game of bowls on Thursday afternoons.
+He died in Manchester in 1844 of paralysis. The first attack he
+suffered in 1837, and a second in 1838 left him much enfeebled,
+both physically and mentally, though he remained able to make
+experiments. In May 1844 he had another stroke; on the 26th
+of July he recorded with trembling hand his last meteorological
+observation, and on the 27th he fell from his bed and was found
+lifeless by his attendant. A bust of him, by Chantrey, was
+publicly subscribed for in 1833 and placed in the entrance hall of
+the Manchester Royal Institution.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Henry, <i>Life of Dalton</i>, Cavendish Society (1854); Angus
+Smith, <i>Memoir of John Dalton and History of the Atomic Theory</i>
+(1856), which on pp. 253-263 gives a list of Dalton&rsquo;s publications;
+and Roscoe and Harden, <i>A New View of the Origin of Dalton&rsquo;s Atomic
+Theory</i> (1896); also Atom.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALTON,<a name="ar49" id="ar49"></a></span> a city and the county-seat of Whitfield county,
+Georgia, U.S.A., in the N.W. part of the state, 100 m. N.N.W. of
+Atlanta. Pop. (1890) 3046; (1900) 4315 (957 negroes); (1910) 5324.
+Dalton is served by the Southern, the Nashville, Chattanooga &amp;
+St Louis, and the Western &amp; Atlanta (operated by the Nashville,
+Chattanooga &amp; St Louis) railways. The city is in a rich agricultural
+region; ships cotton, grain, fruit and ore; and has various
+manufactures, including canned fruit and vegetables, flour and
+foundry and machine shop products. It is the seat of Dalton
+Female College. Dalton was founded by Duff Green and others
+in 1848, and was incorporated in 1874. Hither General Braxton
+Bragg retreated after his defeat at Chattanooga in the last week
+of November 1863. Three weeks afterwards Bragg, in command
+of the army in northern Georgia in winter quarters here, was
+replaced by General Joseph E. Johnston, who, with his force of
+54,400, adopted defensive tactics to meet Sherman&rsquo;s invasion of
+Georgia, with his 99,000 or 100,000 men in the Army of the
+Cumberland (60,000) under General G. H. Thomas, the Army of
+the Tennessee (25,000) under General J. B. M&lsquo;Pherson, and the
+Army of the Ohio (14,000) under General J. M. Schofield. The
+Federal forces stretched for 20 m. in a position south of Ringgold
+and between Ringgold and Dalton. Johnston&rsquo;s line of defences
+included Rocky Face Ridge, a wall of rock through which the
+railway passes about 5 m. north-west of the city, Mill Creek (1 m.
+north-north-west of Dalton), which he dammed so that it could
+not be forded, and earthworks north and east of the city. On
+the 7th of May General M&rsquo;Pherson started for Resaca, 18 m.
+south of Dalton, to occupy the railway there in Johnston&rsquo;s rear,
+but he did not attack Resaca, thinking it too strongly protected;
+Thomas, with Schofield on his left, on the 7th forced the Confederates
+through Buzzard&rsquo;s Roost Gap (the pass at Mill Creek)
+north-west of Dalton; at Dug Gap, 4 m. south-west of Dalton,
+on the 8th a fierce Federal assault under Brigadier-General John
+W. Geary failed to dislodge the Confederates from a quite impregnable
+position. On the 11th the main body of Sherman&rsquo;s
+army followed M&rsquo;Pherson toward Resaca, and Johnston, having
+evacuated Dalton on the night of the 12th, was thus forced, after
+five days&rsquo; man&oelig;uvring and skirmishing, to march to Resaca and
+to meet Sherman there.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See J. D. Cox, <i>The Atlanta Campaign</i> (New York, 1882); Johnson
+and Buel, <i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil War</i> (4 vols., New York,
+1887); and <i>Official Records of the War of the Rebellion</i>, series 1, vols.
+32, 38, 39, 45, 49; series ii., vol. 8.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALTON-IN-FURNESS,<a name="ar50" id="ar50"></a></span> a market town in the North Lonsdale
+parliamentary division of Lancashire, England, 4 m. N.E. by N.
+of Barrow-in-Furness by the Furness railway. Pop. of urban
+district (1901) 13,020. The church of St Mary is in the main a
+modern reconstruction, but retains ancient fragments and a font
+believed to have belonged to Furness Abbey. This fine ruin lies
+3 m. south of Dalton (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Furness</a></span>). St Mary&rsquo;s churchyard
+contains the tomb of the painter George Romney, a native of
+the town. Of Dalton Castle there remains a square tower,
+showing decorated windows. Here was held the manorial court
+of Furness Abbey. There are numerous iron-ore mines in the
+parish, and ironworks at Askam-in-Furness, in the northern part
+of the district.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALY, AUGUSTIN<a name="ar51" id="ar51"></a></span> (1838-1899), American theatrical manager
+and playwright, was born in Plymouth, North Carolina, on the
+20th of July 1838. He was dramatic critic for several New York
+papers from 1859, and he adapted or wrote a number of plays,
+<i>Under the Gaslight</i> (1867) being his first success. In 1869 he was
+the manager of the Fifth Avenue theatre, and in 1879 he built
+and opened Daly&rsquo;s theatre in New York, and, in 1893, Daly&rsquo;s
+theatre in London. At the former he gathered a company of
+players, headed by Miss Ada Rehan, which made for it a high
+reputation, and for them he adapted plays from foreign sources,
+and revived Shakespearean comedies in a manner before unknown
+in America. He took his entire company on tour, visiting
+England, Germany and France, and some of the best actors on
+the American stage have owed their training and first successes
+to him. Among these were Clara Morris, Sara Jewett, John
+Drew, Fanny Davenport, Maude Adams, Mrs Gilbert and many
+others. Daly was a great book-lover, and his valuable library
+was dispersed by auction after his death, which occurred in
+Paris on the 7th of June 1899. Besides plays, original and
+adapted, he wrote <i>Woffington: a Tribute to the Actress and the
+Woman</i> (1888).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DALYELL<a name="ar52" id="ar52"></a></span> (or <span class="sc">Dalziell</span> or <span class="sc">Dalzell</span>), <b>THOMAS</b> (d. 1685),
+British soldier, was the son of Thomas Dalyell of Binns, Linlithgowshire,
+a cadet of the family of the earls of Carnwath, and
+of Janet, daughter of the 1st Lord Bruce of Kinloss, master of
+the rolls in England. He appears to have accompanied the
+Rochelle expedition in 1628, and afterwards, becoming colonel,
+served under Robert Munro, the general in Ireland. He was
+taken prisoner at the capitulation of Carrickfergus in August
+1650, but was given a free pass, and having been banished from
+Scotland remained in Ireland. He was present at the battle of
+Worcester (3rd of September 1651), where his men surrendered,
+and he himself was captured and imprisoned in the Tower. In
+May he escaped abroad, and in 1654 took part in the Highland
+rebellion and was excepted from Cromwell&rsquo;s act of grace, a
+reward of £200 being offered for his capture, dead or alive. The
+king&rsquo;s cause being now for the time hopeless, Dalyell entered the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page780" id="page780"></a>780</span>
+service of the tsar of Russia, and distinguished himself as general
+in the wars against the Turks and Tatars. He returned to Charles
+in 1665, and on the 19th of July 1666 he was appointed commander-in-chief
+in Scotland to subdue the Covenanters. He
+defeated them at Rullion Green and exercised his powers with
+great cruelty, his name becoming a terror to the peasants. He
+obtained several of the forfeited estates. On the 3rd of January
+1667 he was made a privy councillor, and from 1678 till his death
+represented Linlithgow in the Scottish parliament. He was
+incensed by the choice of the duke of Monmouth as commander-in-chief
+in June 1679, and was confirmed in his original appointment
+by Charles, but in consequence did not appear at Bothwell
+Bridge till after the close of the engagement. On the 25th of
+November 1681, a commission was issued authorizing him to
+enrol the regiment afterwards known as the Scots Greys. He
+was continued in his appointment by James II., but died soon
+after the latter&rsquo;s accession in August 1685. He married Agnes,
+daughter of John Ker of Cavers, by whom he had a son, Thomas,
+created a baronet in 1685, whose only son and heir, Thomas,
+died unmarried. The baronetage apparently became extinct,
+but it was assumed about 1726 by James Menteith, a son of the
+sister of the last baronet, who took the name of Dalyell; his
+last male descendant, Sir Robert Dalyell, died unmarried in
+1886.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAM.<a name="ar53" id="ar53"></a></span> (1) (A common Teutonic word, cf. Swed. and Ger.
+<i>damm</i>, and the Gothic verb <i>faurdammjan</i>, to block up), a barrier
+of earth or masonry erected to restrain, divert or contain a
+body of water, particularly in order to form a reservoir. (2)
+(Fr. <i>dame</i>, dame; Lat. <i>domina</i>, feminine of <i>dominus</i>, lord,
+master), the mother of an animal, now chiefly used of the larger
+quadrupeds, and particularly of a mare, the mother of a foal.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMAGES<a name="ar54" id="ar54"></a></span> (through O. Fr. <i>damage</i>, mod. Fr. <i>dommage</i>, from
+Lat. <i>damnum</i>, loss), the compensation which a person who has
+suffered a legal wrong is by law entitled to recover from the person
+responsible for the wrong. Loss caused by an act which is not
+a legal wrong (<i>damnum sine injuria</i>) is not recoverable, e.g.
+where a father loses a young child by the negligence of a third
+party.</p>
+
+<p>The principle of compensation in law makes its first appearance
+as a substitute for personal retaliation. In primitive law something
+of the nature of the Anglo-Saxon <i>wer-gild</i>, or the <span class="grk" title="poinê">&#960;&#959;&#953;&#957;&#942;</span>
+of the <i>Iliad</i>, appears to be universal. It marks out with great
+minuteness the measure of the compensation appropriate to
+each particular case of personal injury. And there is a resemblance
+between the legal compensation, as it may be called, and
+the compensation which an injured person, seeking his own
+remedy, would be likely to exact for himself. In such a system
+the two entirely different objects of personal satisfaction and
+criminal punishment are not clearly separated, and in fact,
+criminal and civil remedies were administered in the same
+proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>Under modern systems of law, the object of legal compensation
+is to place the injured person as nearly as possible in the situation
+in which he would have been but for the injury; and the controlling
+principle is that compensation should be determined so
+far as possible by the actual amount of the loss sustained. In
+England, civil proceedings for reparation and criminal proceedings
+for punishment are with few exceptions carefully kept
+separate. In Scotland, pursuit of the two kinds of remedies in
+the same proceeding is possible but very rare; but in France and
+other European states it is lawful and usual in the case of those
+delicts which are also punishable criminally.</p>
+
+<p>In the law of England the two historical systems of common
+law and equity viewed compensation or reparation from two
+different points of view. The principle of the common law was
+that the amount of every injury might be estimated by pecuniary
+valuation. The idea was no doubt derived from the old tariffs
+of <i>were</i>, <i>bot</i> and <i>wite</i>, in which the valuations were elaborate.
+Until 1858 (Cairns&rsquo; Act) courts of equity had no direct jurisdiction
+to award damages, and their business was to place the
+injured party in the actual position to which he was entitled
+(<i>restitutio ad integrum</i>). This difference comes out most clearly
+in cases of breach of contract. The common law, with a few
+partial exceptions, could do no more than compel the defaulter
+to make good the loss of the other party, by paying him an ascertained
+sum of money as damages. Equity, recognizing the fact
+that complete satisfaction was not in all cases to be obtained by
+mere money payment, compelled those who broke certain classes
+of contracts specifically to perform them, and in the case of acts
+or defaults not amounting to breach of contract, on satisfactory
+proof that a wrong was contemplated, would interfere to prevent
+it by injunction; while at common law no action could be
+brought until the injury was accomplished, and then only
+pecuniary damages could be obtained. Since the Judicature
+Acts this distinction has ceased and the appropriate remedy may
+be awarded in any division of the High Court of Justice.</p>
+
+<p>Under the common law damages were always assessed by a
+jury. Under the existing procedure in England they may be
+assessed (1) by a jury under the directions of a judge; (2) by a
+judge alone or sitting with assessors; (3) by a referee, official or
+special, or officer of the courts with or without the assistance of
+mercantile or other assessors; (4) by a consensual tribunal such
+as an arbitrator or valuer selected by the parties. Whatever the
+mode of assessment, it is subject to review if the assessors have
+clearly mistaken the proper measure of damage.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of assessment by a jury, the verdict may be set
+aside because the damages are clearly excessive or palpably
+insufficient, or arrived at by some irregular conduct, e.g. by
+setting down the sum which each juryman would give and dividing
+the result by twelve. The appellate court, however, cannot,
+without the consent of the parties, itself fix the amount of
+damages in a case which has been submitted to a jury (<i>Watt</i> v.
+<i>Watt</i>, 1905, Appeal Cases 115).</p>
+
+<p>The courts have gradually evolved certain rules or principles
+for the proper assessment of damages, although extreme difficulty
+is found in their application to concrete cases. A
+distinction is drawn between <i>general</i> and <i>special</i>
+<span class="sidenote">Measure of damages.</span>
+damages. (1) General damage is that <i>implied by law</i>
+as necessarily flowing from the breach of right, and
+requiring no proof. (2) Special damage is that <i>in fact</i> caused by
+the wrong. Under existing practice this form of damage cannot
+be recovered unless it has been specifically claimed and proved,
+or unless the best available particulars or details have been
+before trial communicated to the party against whom it is
+claimed.</p>
+
+<p><i>Contracts.</i>&mdash;&ldquo;The law imposes or implies a term that upon
+breach of contract damages must be paid.&rdquo; The general tendency
+of legal decisions in cases of contract is (i.) to make the
+amount of damages which may be awarded a matter of legal
+certainty, (ii.) to leave to a jury or like tribunal little more to do
+than find the facts, (iii.) and to revise the assessment if it is
+clear that it has been made in disregard of the terms of the
+contract or of the natural and direct consequences of the breach.
+The measure of damage, general speaking, is the sum necessary
+to place the aggrieved party in the same position so far as money
+will do it as if the contract had been performed. If the breach
+is proved, but the person complaining has suffered no real
+damage, he is entitled to have his legal right recognized by an
+award of what are called <i>nominal damages</i>, i.e. a sum just sufficient
+to carry a judgment in his favour on the infraction of his
+rights. Nominal damages, it will therefore be seen, are not the
+same as &ldquo;small damages.&rdquo; He is, however, also entitled to
+prove and recover the special or particular damage lawfully
+attributable to the breach. Where the contract is to pay a
+fixed sum of money or liquidated amount, the measure of
+damages for non-payment is the sum agreed to be paid and
+interest thereon at the rate stipulated in the contract or recognized
+by law.</p>
+
+<p>The law is the same in Scotland and in France (Civil Code, art.
+1153). In some contracts the parties themselves fix the sum
+to be paid as damages if the contract is not fulfilled. These
+damages are described as <i>liquidated</i>, in Scots law <i>stipulated</i> or
+<i>estimated</i>. It would be supposed that the sum thus fixed would
+be the proper damages to be awarded. And under the French
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page781" id="page781"></a>781</span>
+Civil Code (arts. 1152, 1153, 1780) the stipulation of the parties
+as to the damages to be paid for breach of a stipulation other
+than for paying a sum of money is binding on the courts. But
+in England, Scotland and the United States, courts disregard the
+words used, and inquire into the real nature of the transaction in
+order to see whether the sum fixed is to be treated as ascertained
+damage or as a penalty to be held <i>in terrorem</i> over the defaulter,
+and in the latter case, notwithstanding the stipulation, will
+require proof of the actual loss. In <i>Kemble</i> v. <i>Farren</i> (1829, 6
+Bingham, 141), a contract between a manager and an actor
+provided that for a breach of any of the stipulations therein, the
+sum of £1000 should be payable by the defaulter, not as a
+penalty, but as liquidated and ascertained damages. Yet, the
+court, observing that under the stipulations of the contract the
+sum of £1000, if it were taken to be liquidated damages, might
+become payable for mere non-payment of a trifling sum, held
+that it was not fixed as damages, but as a penalty only. The
+case in which an agreed sum is most usually treated as a penalty
+is a bond to pay a fixed sum containing a condition that it shall
+be void if certain acts are done or a certain smaller sum paid.
+Another case is where a single lump sum is fixed as the liquidated
+amount of damage to be paid for doing or failing to do a number
+of different things of very varying degrees of importance (<i>Elphinstone</i>
+v. <i>Monkland Iron Co.</i>, 1887, 11 A.C. 333). But the courts
+have accepted as creating a contractual measure of damage a
+stipulation to finish sewerage works by a given day (<i>Law</i> v.
+<i>Redditch Local Board</i>, 1892, 1 Q.B. 127); or to complete
+torpedo boats within a limited time for a foreign government
+(<i>Clydebank Engineering Co.</i> v. <i>Yzquierda</i>, 1905, A.C. 6). In
+this last case the law lords indicated that the provision of an
+agreed sum was peculiarly appropriate in view of the difficulty of
+showing the exact damage which a state sustains by non-delivery
+of a warship. Where the damage is not liquidated or agreed
+it is assessed to upon evidence as to the actual loss naturally and
+directly flowing from the breach of contract.</p>
+
+<p>In contracts for the sale of goods the measure of damages is
+fixed by statute. Where the buyer wrongfully refuses or neglects
+to accept and pay for, or the seller wrongfully neglects or refuses
+to deliver the goods, the measure is the estimated loss directly
+and naturally resulting in the ordinary course of events from
+the buyer&rsquo;s or seller&rsquo;s breach of contract. Where there is an
+available market for the goods in question, the measure of
+damages is prima facie to be ascertained by the difference between
+the contract price and the market or current price at the time
+or times when the goods ought to have been accepted or delivered,
+or if no such time was fixed for acceptance or delivery, then at
+the time of refusal to accept or deliver (Sale of Goods Act 1893,
+§§ 50, 51).</p>
+
+<p>Where there is no market, the value is fixed by the price of the
+nearest available substitute. Where the sufferer, at the request
+of the person in default, postpones purchase or sale, any increased
+loss thereby caused falls on the defaulter. If the buyer,
+before the time fixed for delivery, has resold the goods to a sub-vendor,
+he cannot claim against his own vendor any damages
+which the sub-vendor may recover against him for breach of
+contract, because he ought to have gone into the market and
+purchased other goods. But this is subject to modification in
+cases falling within the rule in <i>Hadley</i> v. <i>Baxendale</i> (1854, 9
+Exchequer, 341). But trouble and expense incurred by the seller
+of finding a new purchaser or other goods may be taken account
+of in assessing the damages.</p>
+
+<p>Where the goods delivered are not as contracted the buyer
+may as a rule sue the seller for a breach of warranty, or set it
+up as reduction of price. Where the warranty is of quality the
+loss is prima facie the difference between the value of the goods
+delivered when delivered and the value which they would have
+then had if they had answered to the warranty (Sale of Goods
+Act 1893, § 53). In an American case, where a person had agreed
+with a boarding-house keeper for a year, and quitted the house
+within the time, it was held that the measure of damages was not
+the price stipulated to be paid, but only the loss caused by the
+breach of contract. In contracts to marry, a special class of
+considerations is recognized, and the jury in assessing damages
+will take notice of the conduct of the parties. The social position
+and means of the defendant may be given in evidence to show
+what the plaintiff has lost by the breach of contract.</p>
+
+<p>On a breach of contract to replace stock lent, the measure of
+damages is the price of the stock on the day when it ought to
+have been delivered, or on the day of trial, at the plaintiff&rsquo;s
+option.</p>
+
+<p>In contracts for the sale of realty, the measure of damage for
+breach by the vendor is the amount of any deposit paid by the
+would-be purchaser and of the expenses thrown away. But the
+purchaser may, in a proper case, obtain specific performance,
+and if he has been cheated may obtain damages in an action for
+deceit.</p>
+
+<p>Breaches of trust are in a sense distinct from breaches of
+contract, as they fell under the jurisdiction of courts of equity
+and not of the common law courts. The rule applied was to
+require a defaulting trustee to make good to the beneficiaries
+any loss flowing from a breach of trust and not to allow him to
+set off against this liability any gain to the trust fund resulting
+from a different breach of trust or from good management
+(Lewin on <i>Trusts</i>, ed. 1904, 1146).</p>
+
+<p>In estimating the proper amount to be assessed as damages
+for a breach of contract, it is not permissible to include every
+loss caused by the act or default upon which the claim for
+damages is based. The damage to be awarded must be that
+fairly and naturally arising from the breach under ordinary
+circumstances or the special circumstances of the particular
+contract, or in other words, which may reasonably be supposed
+to have been in the contemplation of the parties at the time of
+making the contract. The chief authority for this rule is the
+case of <i>Hadley</i> v. <i>Baxendale</i> (1854, 9 Exch. 341), which has
+been accepted in Scotland and the United States and throughout
+the British empire, and often differs little, if at all, from the
+rule adopted in the French civil code (art. 1150). In that case
+damages were sought for the loss of profits caused by a steam mill
+being kept idle, on account of the delay of the defendants in
+sending a new shaft which they had contracted to make. The
+court held the damage to be too remote, and stated the proper
+rule as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>&ldquo;Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has
+broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect
+of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably
+be considered either arising naturally, i.e. according to the usual
+course of things, from such breach of contract itself, or such as may
+reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both
+parties at the time they made the contract as the probable result of
+the breach of it. Now if the special circumstances under which the
+contract was actually made were communicated by the plaintiffs to
+the defendants, and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting
+from such contract which they would reasonably contemplate
+would be the amount of injury which would ordinarily flow from a
+breach of contract under these special circumstances so known and
+communicated. But on the other hand, if those special circumstances
+were wholly unknown to the party breaking the contract, he at the
+most could only be supposed to have had in his mind the amount of
+injury which would arise generally, and in the great multitude of
+cases not affected by any special circumstances, from such breach of
+contract.&rdquo;<a name="fa1c" id="fa1c" href="#ft1c"><span class="sp">1</span></a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The rule is, however, only a general guide, and does not
+obviate the necessity of inquiring in each case what are the
+natural or contemplated damages. In an action by the proprietor
+of a theatre, it was alleged that the defendant had
+written a libel on one of the plaintiff&rsquo;s singers, whereby she was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page782" id="page782"></a>782</span>
+deterred from appearing on the stage, and the plaintiff lost his
+profits; such loss was held to be too remote to be the ground
+of an action for damages. In <i>Smeed</i> v. <i>Foord</i> (1 Ellis and Ellis,
+602), the defendant contracted to deliver a threshing-machine
+to the plaintiff, a farmer, knowing that it was needed to thresh
+the wheat in the field. Damages were sought for injury done to
+the wheat by rain in consequence of the machine not having
+been delivered in time, and also for a fall in the market before
+the grain could be got ready. It was held that the first claim
+was good, as the injury might have been anticipated, but that
+the second was bad. When, through the negligence of a railway
+company in delivering bales of cotton, the plaintiffs, having no
+cotton to work with, were obliged to keep their workmen unemployed,
+it was held that the wages paid and the profits lost
+were too remote for damages. On the other hand, where the
+defendant failed to keep funds on hand to meet the drafts of
+the plaintiff, so that a draft was returned dishonoured, and his
+business in consequence was for a time suspended and injured,
+the plaintiff was held entitled to recover damage for such loss.</p>
+
+<p>The rule that the contract furnishes the measure of the
+damages does not prevail in the case of unconscionable, i.e.
+unreasonable, absurd or impossible contracts. The old school-book
+juggle in geometrical progression has more than once
+been before the courts as the ground of an action. Thus, when
+a man agreed to pay for a horse a barley-corn per nail, doubling
+it every nail, and the amount calculated as 32 nails was 500
+quarters of barley, the judge directed the jury to disregard the
+contract, and give as damages the value of the horse. And when
+a defendant had agreed for £5 to give the plaintiff two grains of
+rye on Monday, four on the next Monday,<a name="fa2c" id="fa2c" href="#ft2c"><span class="sp">2</span></a> and so on doubling it
+every Monday, it was contended that the contract was impossible,
+as all the rye in the world would not suffice for it; but one of the
+judges said that, though foolish, it would hold in law, and the
+defendant ought to pay something for his folly. And when a
+man had promised £1000 to the plaintiff if he should find his owl,
+the jury were directed to mitigate the damages.</p>
+
+<p>Interest is recoverable as damages at common law only upon
+mercantile securities, such as bills of exchange and promissory
+notes or where a promise to pay interest has been made in express
+terms or may be implied from the usage of trade or other circumstances
+[Mayne, <i>Damages</i> (7th ed.) 166]. Under the Civil
+Procedure Act 1833, the jury is allowed to give interest by way
+of damages on debts or sums payable at a certain time, or if not
+so payable, from the date of demand in writing, and in actions
+on policies of insurance, and in actions of tort arising out of
+conversion or seizure of goods.</p>
+
+<p>In the United States, interest is in the discretion of the court,
+and is made to depend on the equity of the case. In both
+England and America compound interest, or interest on interest,
+appears to have been regarded with the horror that formerly
+attached to usury. Lord Eldon would not recognize as valid
+an agreement to pay compound interest. And Chancellor Kent
+held that compound interest could not be taken except upon a
+special agreement made after the simple interest became due.</p>
+
+<p>In Scotland compound interest is not allowed by way of
+damages.</p>
+
+<p><i>Torts.</i>&mdash;In actions arising otherwise than from breach of
+contract (i.e. of tort, delict or quasi-delict), the principles applied
+to the assessment of damage in cases arising <i>ex contractu</i> are
+generally applicable (<i>The Notting Hill</i>, 1884, 9 P.D. 105); but
+from the nature of the case less precision in assessment is attainable.
+The remoteness of the damage claimed is a ground for
+excluding it from the assessment. In some actions of tort the
+damages can be calculated with exactness just as in cases of
+contract, e.g. in most cases of interference with rights of property
+or injury to property. Thus, for wrongful dispossession from a
+plantation (in Samoa) it was held that the measure of damage
+was the annual value of the produce of the lands when wrongfully
+seized, less the cost of management, and that the wilful character
+of the seizure did not justify the infliction of a penalty over and
+above the loss to the plaintiff (<i>McArthur</i> v. <i>Cornwall</i>, 1892,
+A.C. 75). Where minerals are wrongfully severed and carried
+away, the damage is assessed by calculating the value of the
+mineral as a chattel and deducting the reasonable expense of
+getting it. But where the interference with property, whether
+real or personal, is attended by circumstances of aggravation
+such as crime or fraud or wanton insult, it is well established
+that additional damages may be awarded which in effect are
+penal or vindictive. In actions for injuries to the person or to
+reputation, it is difficult to make the damages a matter for
+exact calculation, and it has been found impossible or inexpedient
+by the courts to prevent juries from awarding amounts which
+operate as a punishment of the delinquent rather than as a
+true assessment of the reparation due to the sufferer. And
+while a bad motive (malice) is seldom enough to give a cause
+of action, proof of its existence is a potent inducement to a jury
+to swell the assessment of damages, as evidence of bad character
+may induce them to reduce the damages to a derisory amount.
+In the case of injuries to the person caused by negligence, the
+tribunal considers, as part of the general damage, the actual pain
+and suffering, including nervous shock (but not wounded feelings)
+and the permanent or temporary character of the injury, and as
+special damage the loss of time and employment during recovery
+and the cost of cure. It is difficult by any arithmetical calculation
+to value pain and suffering; nor is it easy to value the effect
+of a permanent injury; and in the Workmen&rsquo;s Compensation Act
+and Employers&rsquo; Liability Act, an attempt has been made in the
+case of workmen to assess by reference to the earnings of the
+injured person.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of such wrongs as assault, arrest or prosecution,
+the motives of the defendant naturally affect the amount of
+general damage awarded, even when not essential elements in
+the case, and the damages are &ldquo;at large.&rdquo; Any other rule would
+enable a man to distribute blows as he can utter curses at a
+statutory tariff of so much a curse, according to his rank. This
+position was strongly asserted in the cases arising out of the
+celebrated &ldquo;General Warrants&rdquo; (1763) in the time of Lord
+Camden, who is reported in one case to have said, &ldquo;damages
+are designed not only as a satisfaction to the injured person,
+but as a punishment to the guilty, and as a proof of the detestation
+in which the wrongful act is held by the jury.&rdquo; In another
+case he mentioned the importance of the question at issue,
+the attempt to exercise arbitrary power, as a reason why the
+jury might give exemplary damages. Another judge, in another
+case, said &ldquo;I remember a case when the jury gave £500 damages
+for knocking a man&rsquo;s hat off; and the court refused a new
+trial.&rdquo; And he urged that exemplary damages for personal insult
+would tend to prevent the practice of duelling.</p>
+
+<p>The right to give exemplary or punitive or (as they are sometimes
+called) vindictive damages is fully recognized both in
+England and in the United States, and especially in the following
+cases. (1) Against the co-respondent in a divorce suit. This
+right is the same as that recognized at common law in the
+abolished action of criminal conversation, but the damages
+awarded may by the court be applied for the maintenance and
+education of the children of the marriage or the maintenance
+of the offending wife. (2) In actions of trespass to land where
+the conduct of the defendant has been outrageous. (3) In
+actions of defamation spoken or written, attended by circumstances
+of aggravation, and the analogous action of malicious
+prosecution. (4) In the anomalous actions of seduction and
+breach of promise of marriage.</p>
+
+<p>In actions for wrongs, as in those <i>ex contractu</i>, the damages
+may be general or special. In a few cases of tort, the action fails
+wholly if special damage is not proved, e.g. slander by imputing
+to a man vicious, unchaste or immoral conduct, slander of title
+to land or goods or nuisance.</p>
+
+<p>In theory, English law does not recognize &ldquo;moral or intellectual&rdquo;
+damage, such as was claimed by the South African
+Republic after the Jameson Raid. The law of Scotland allows
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page783" id="page783"></a>783</span>
+a solatium for wounded feelings, as does French law under the
+name of <i>dommage moral, éprouvé par la partie lésée dans sa
+liberté, sa sûreté, son honneur, sa considération, ses affections
+légitimes ou dans la jouissance de son patrimoine</i>. Under this head
+compensation is awarded to widow, child or sister, for the loss of
+husband, parent or brother, in addition to the actual pecuniary
+loss (Dalloz, <i>Nouveau Code civil</i>, art. 1382). Claims of damage
+for negligence are defeated by proof of what is known as contributory
+negligence (<i>faute commune</i>). In other claims of tort,
+as already stated, the conduct of the claimant may materially
+reduce the amount of his damages.</p>
+
+<p>In cases of damages to ships or cargo by collision at sea, the
+rule of the old court of admiralty (derived from the civil law
+and preserved by the Judicature Acts) is that when both or all
+vessels are to blame, the whole amount of the loss is divided
+between them. The rule appears not to apply to cases where
+death or personal injury results from the collision (&ldquo;Vera Cruz,&rdquo;
+1884, 14 A.C. 59. &ldquo;Bernina,&rdquo; 1888, 13 A.C. 1).</p>
+
+<p><i>Costs.</i>&mdash;The costs of a legal proceeding are no longer treated as
+damages to be assessed by the jury, nor do they depend on any
+act of the jury. The right to receive them depends on the court,
+and they are taxed or assessed by its officers (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Costs</a></span>). In a
+few cases where costs cannot be given, e.g. on compulsory
+acquisition of land in London, the assessing tribunal is invited
+to add to the compensation price the owner&rsquo;s expense in the
+compensation proceedings.</p>
+
+<p><i>Death.</i>&mdash;In English law a right to recover damages for a tort
+as a general rule was lost on the death of the sufferer or of the
+delinquent. The cause of action was considered not to survive.
+This rule differs from that of Scots law (under which the claim
+for damages arises at the moment of injury and is not affected
+by the death of either party). The English rule has been criticized
+as barbarous, and has been considerably broken in upon by
+legislation, in cases of taking the goods of another (4 Edw. III.,
+c. 7, 1330), and injuries to real or personal property (3 &amp; 4
+Will. IV., c. 42, 1833), but continues in force as to such matters
+as defamation, malicious prosecution and trespass to the person.
+By the Fatal Accidents Act 1846 (commonly called Lord Campbell&rsquo;s
+Act), it is enacted that wherever a wrongful act would have
+entitled the injured person to recover damages (if death had not
+ensued), the person who in such case would have been liable
+&ldquo;shall be liable to an action for damages for the pecuniary loss
+which the death has caused to certain persons, and although the
+death shall have been caused under such circumstances as amount
+in law to felony.&rdquo; The only persons by whom or for whose
+benefit such an action may be brought are the husband, wife,
+parent and child (including grandchild and stepchild, but not
+illegitimate child) of the deceased. The right of action and the
+measure of damages are statutory and distinct from the right
+which the deceased had till he died. It was held in <i>Osborne</i> v.
+<i>Gillett</i>, 1873, L.R. 8 Ex. 88, and has since been approved (<i>Clark</i>
+v. <i>London General Omnibus Co.</i>, 1906, 2 K.B. 648), that no
+person can recover damages for the death of another wrongfully
+killed by the act of a third person, unless he claims through or
+represents the person killed, and unless that person in case of an
+injury short of death would have had a good claim to recover
+damages.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>In Scotland the law of compensation for breach of contract is
+substantially the same as in England. In cases of delict or quasi-delict,
+the measure of reparation is a fair and reasonable compensation
+for the advantage which the sufferer would, but for the wrong,
+have enjoyed and has lost as a natural and proximate result of the
+wrong, coupled with a solatium for wounded feelings. The claim
+for reparation vests as a debt when it arises and survives to the
+representatives of the sufferer, and against the representatives of the
+delinquent. In other words, the maxim <i>actio personalis moritur cum
+persona</i> does not apply in Scots law; and even in cases of murder
+there has always been recognized a right to &ldquo;assythement.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>See also Mayne on <i>Damages</i>, 7th ed.; Sedgwick on <i>Damage</i>;
+Bell, <i>Principles of Law of Scotland</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. F. C.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1c" id="ft1c" href="#fa1c"><span class="fn">1</span></a> In the Indian Contracts Code (Act xii. of 1872), the rule is thus
+summarized:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When a contract has been broken, the party who suffers by
+such breach is entitled to receive from the party who has broken
+the contract, compensation for any loss or damage caused to him
+thereby, which naturally arose in the usual course of things from
+such breach, or which the parties knew when they made the contract
+to be likely to result from the breach of it. Such compensation is
+not to be given for any remote or indirect loss or damage sustained
+by reason of the breach.... In estimating the loss or damage
+arising from a breach of contract, the means of remedying the
+inconvenience caused by the non-performance must be taken into
+account&rdquo; (§ 73).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2c" id="ft2c" href="#fa2c"><span class="fn">2</span></a> <i>Quolibet alio die lunae</i>, which was translated by some <i>every
+Monday</i>, and by others <i>every other Monday</i>. The amount in the
+latter case would have been 125 quarters, in the former 524,288,000
+quarters.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMANH&#362;R,<a name="ar55" id="ar55"></a></span> a town of Lower Egypt, 38 m. E.S.E. of Alexandria
+by rail, capital of the richly-cultivated province of Behera.
+It is the ancient Timenh&#333;r, &ldquo;town of Horus,&rdquo; which in Ptolemaic
+times was capital of a nome and lay on the Canopic branch of the
+Nile. Its name and other circumstances imply that Horus
+(= Apollo) was worshipped there in the same form as at Edfu
+(Brugsch, <i>Dictionnaire géographique</i>, p. 521), but its Greek name,
+Hermopolis Parva, should indicate Thoth as the local god.
+This apparent contradiction is perhaps due to some early misunderstanding
+that held its ground after the Greeks knew Egypt
+better. A much frequented fair is held at Damanh&#363;r three
+times a year, and there are several cotton manufactories.
+Population (1907) 38,752.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMARALAND<a name="ar56" id="ar56"></a></span>, a region of south-western Africa, bounded
+W. by the Atlantic, E. by the Kalahari, N. by Ovampoland,
+and S. by Great Namaqualand. It forms the central portion
+of German South-West Africa. Damaraland is alternatively
+known as Hereroland, both names being derived from the tribes
+inhabiting the region. The so-called Damara consist of two
+probably distinct peoples. They are known respectively as
+&ldquo;the Hill Damara&rdquo; and &ldquo;the Cattle Damara,&rdquo; i.e. those who
+breed cattle in the plains. The Hill Damara are Negroes with
+much Hottentot blood, and have adopted the Hottentot tongue,
+while the Cattle Damara are of distinct Bantu-Negro descent
+and speak a Bantu language. The term Damara (&ldquo;Two Dama
+Women&rdquo;) is of Hottentot origin, and is not used by the people,
+who call themselves Ova-herero, &ldquo;the Merry People&rdquo; (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Hottentots</a></span> and <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Herero</a></span>).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMASCENING,<a name="ar57" id="ar57"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Damaskeening</span>, a term sometimes applied
+to the production of damask steel, but properly the art of in-crusting
+wire of gold (and sometimes of silver or copper) on the
+surface of iron, steel or bronze. The surface upon which the
+pattern is to be traced is finely undercut with a sharp instrument,
+and the gold thread by hammering is forced into and securely
+held by the minute furrows of the cut surface. This system of
+ornamentation is peculiarly Oriental, having been much practised
+by the early goldsmiths of Damascus, and it is still eminently
+characteristic of Persian metal work.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMASCIUS,<a name="ar58" id="ar58"></a></span> the last of the Neoplatonists, was born in
+Damascus about A.D. 480. In his early youth he went to Alexandria,
+where he spent twelve years partly as a pupil of Theon,
+a rhetorician, and partly as a professor of rhetoric. He then
+turned to philosophy and science, and studied under Hermeias
+and his sons, Ammonius and Heliodorus. Later on in life he
+migrated to Athens and continued his studies under Marinus,
+the mathematician, Zenodotus, and Isidore, the dialectician.
+He became a close friend of Isidore, succeeded him as head of the
+school in Athens, and wrote his biography, part of which is
+preserved in the <i>Bibliotheca</i> of Photius (see appendix to the
+Didot edition of Diogenes Laërtius). In 529 Justinian closed the
+school, and Damascius with six of his colleagues sought an
+asylum, probably in 532, at the court of Chosroes I., king of
+Persia. They found the conditions intolerable, and in 533, in a
+treaty between Justinian and Chosroes, it was provided that they
+should be allowed to return. It is believed that Damascius
+settled in Alexandria and there devoted himself to the writing
+of his works. The date of his death is not known.</p>
+
+<p>His chief treatise is entitled <i>Difficulties and Solutions of First
+Principles</i> (<span class="grk" title="&rsquo;Aporiai kai chuseis peri tôn prôtôn apxôn">&#7944;&#960;&#959;&#961;&#943;&#945;&#953; &#954;&#945;&#8054; &#967;&#973;&#963;&#949;&#953;&#962; &#960;&#949;&#961;&#8054; &#964;&#8182;&#957; &#960;&#961;&#974;&#964;&#969;&#957; &#7936;&#961;&#967;&#8182;&#957;</span>). It
+examines into the nature and attributes of God and the human
+soul. This examination is, in two respects, in striking contrast
+to that of certain other Neoplatonist writers. It is conspicuously
+free from that Oriental mysticism which stultifies so much of the
+later pagan philosophy of Europe. Secondly, it contains no
+polemic against Christianity, to the doctrines of which, in fact,
+there is no allusion. Hence the charge of impiety which Photius
+brings against him. His main result is that God is infinite, and
+as such, incomprehensible; that his attributes of goodness,
+knowledge and power are credited to him only by inference
+from their effects; that this inference is logically valid and
+sufficient for human thought. He insists throughout on the
+unity and the indivisibility of God, whereas Plotinus and
+Porphyry had admitted not only a Trinity, but even an Ennead
+(nine-fold personality).</p>
+
+<p>Interesting as Damascius is in himself, he is still more interesting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page784" id="page784"></a>784</span>
+as the last in the long succession of Greek philosophers. (See
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Neoplatonism</a></span>.)</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;The <span class="grk" title="Aporiai">&#7944;&#960;&#959;&#961;&#943;&#945;&#953;</span> was partly edited by J. Kopp
+(1826), and in full by C. E. Ruelle (Paris, 1889). French trans. by
+Chaignet (1898). See T. Whittaker, <i>The Neo-platonists</i> (Cambridge,
+1901); E. Zeller, <i>History of Greek Philosophy</i>; C. E. Ruelle, <i>Le
+Philosophe Damascius</i> (1861); Ch. Levêque, &ldquo;Damascius&rdquo; (<i>Journal
+des savants</i>, February 1891). See also works quoted under <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Neoplatonism</a></span>
+and <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Alexandrian School</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMASCUS,<a name="ar59" id="ar59"></a></span> the chief town of Syria, and the capital of a
+government province of the same name, 57 m. from Beirut,
+situated in 33° 30&prime; N., and 36° 18&prime; E.</p>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;The origin of the city is unknown, and the popular
+belief that it is the oldest city in the world still inhabited has
+much to recommend it. It has been suggested that the ideogram
+by which it is indicated in Babylonian monuments literally means
+&ldquo;fortress of the Amorites&rdquo;; could this be proved it would be
+valuable testimony to its antiquity if not its origin. The city is
+mentioned in the document that describes the battle of the four
+kings against five, inserted in the book of Genesis (ch. xiv.):
+Abram (Abraham) is reported to have pursued the routed kings
+to Hobah <i>north of Damascus</i> (v. 15). The name of the steward
+of Abram&rsquo;s establishment is given in Genesis xv. 2, as <i>Dammesek
+Eliezer</i>, which is explained in the Aramaic and Syriac versions as
+&ldquo;Eliezer of Damascus.&rdquo; This reading is adopted by the authorized
+version, but the Hebrew, as it stands, will not support it.
+There is probably here some textual corruption.</p>
+
+<p>In the period of the Egyptian suzerainty over Palestine in the
+eighteenth dynasty Damascus (whose name frequently appears in
+the Tell el-Amarna tablets) was capital of the small province of
+Ubi. The name of the city in the Tell el-Amarna correspondence
+is Dimash&#7731;a. Towards the end of that period the overrunning
+of Palestine and Syria by the Khabiri and Suti, the forerunners
+of the Aramaean immigration, changed the conditions, language
+and government of the country. One of the first indications of
+this change that has been traced is the appearance of the Aramaean
+Darmesek for Damascus in an inscription of Rameses III.</p>
+
+<p>The growth of an independent kingdom with Damascus as
+centre must date from very early in the Aramaean occupation.
+It had reached such strength that though Tiglath-Pileser I.
+reduced the whole of northern Syria, and by the fame of his
+victories induced the king of Egypt to send him presents, yet he
+did not venture to attack Kadesh and Damascus, so that this
+kingdom acted as a &ldquo;buffer&rdquo; between the king of Assyria and
+the rising kingdom of Saul.</p>
+
+<p>David, however, after his accession made an expedition
+against Damascus as a reprisal for the assistance the city had
+given his enemy Hadadezer, king of Zobah. The expedition was
+successful; David smote of the Syrians 22,000 men, and took
+and garrisoned the city; &ldquo;and the Syrians became servants to
+David, and brought gifts&rdquo; (2 Sam. viii. 5, 6; 1 Chron. xviii. 5).
+This statement, it should be noticed, has been questioned by
+some modern historical and textual critics, who believe that
+&ldquo;Syria&rdquo; (Hebrew <i>Aram</i>) is here a corruption for &ldquo;Edom.&rdquo;
+There is no other evidence&mdash;save the corrupt passage, 2 Sam. xxiv.
+6, where &ldquo;Tahtim-hodshi&rdquo; is explained as meaning &ldquo;the land
+of the Hittites to Kadesh&rdquo;&mdash;that David&rsquo;s kingdom was so far
+extended northward. However this may be, it is evident that
+the Israelite possession of Syria did not last long. A subordinate
+of Hadadezer named Rezon (Rasun) succeeded in establishing
+himself in Damascus and in founding there a royal dynasty.
+Throughout the reign of Solomon (1 Kings xi. 23, 24) this Rezon
+seems to have been a constant enemy to the kingdom of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>It is inferred from 1 Kings xv. 19 that Abijah, son of Rehoboam,
+king of Judah, made a league with Tab-Rimmon of Damascus to
+assist him in his wars against Israel, and that afterwards Tab-Rimmon&rsquo;s
+son Ben-Hadad came to terms with the second successor
+of Jeroboam, Baasha. Asa, son of Abijah, followed his
+father&rsquo;s policy, and bought the aid of Syria, whereby he was
+enabled to destroy the border fort that Baasha had erected
+(1 Kings xv. 22).</p>
+
+<p>Hostilities between Israel and Syria lasted to the days of Ahab.
+From Omri the king of Syria took cities and the right to establish
+a quarter for his merchants in Samaria (1 Kings xx. 34). His
+son Ben-Hadad made an unsuccessful attack on Israel at Aphek,
+and was allowed by Ahab to depart on a reversal of these terms
+(<i>loc. cit.</i>). This was the cause of a prophetic denunciation (1
+Kings xx. 42). According to the Assyrian records Ahab fought
+as Ben-Hadad&rsquo;s ally at the battle of Karkar against Shalmaneser
+in 854. This seems to indicate an intermediate defeat and
+vassalage of Ahab, of which no direct record remains; and it
+was probably in the attempt to throw off this vassalage in 853,
+the year after the battle of Karkar, that Ahab met his death in
+battle with the Syrians (1 Kings xxii. 34-40). In the reign of
+Jehoram, Naaman, the Syrian general, came and was cleansed by
+the prophet Elisha of leprosy (2 Kings v.).</p>
+
+<p>In 843 Hazael assassinated Ben-Hadad and made himself
+king of Damascus. The states which Ben-Hadad had brought
+together into a coalition against the advancing power of Assyria
+all revolted; and Shalmaneser, king of Assyria, took advantage
+of this in 842 and attacked Syria. He wasted the country, but
+could not take the capital. Jehu, king of Israel, paid tribute to
+Assyria, for which Hazael afterwards revenged himself, during
+the time when Shalmaneser was distracted by his Armenian
+wars, by attacking the borders of Israel (2 Kings x. 32).</p>
+
+<p>Adad-nirari IV. invaded Syria and besieged Damascus in 806.
+Taking advantage of this and similar succeeding events, Jehoash,
+king of Israel, recovered the cities that his father had lost to
+Hazael.</p>
+
+<p>In 734 Ahaz became king of Judah, and Rezon (Ra&#7779;un, Rezin),
+the king of Damascus at the time, came up against him; at the
+same time the Edomites and the Philistines revolted. Ahaz
+appealed to Tiglath-Pileser III., king of Assyria, sent him gifts,
+and besought his protection. Tiglath-Pileser invaded Syria, and
+in 732 succeeded in reducing Damascus (see also <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Babylonia
+and Assyria</a></span>, <i>Chronology</i>, § 5, and <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Jews</a></span>, §§ 10 sqq.).</p>
+
+<p>Except for the abortive rising under Sargon in 720, we hear
+nothing more of Damascus for a long period. In 333 B.C., after
+the battle of Issus, it was delivered over by treachery to Parmenio,
+the general of Alexander the Great; the harem and
+treasures of Darius had here been lodged. It had a chequered
+history during the wars of the successors of Alexander, being
+occasionally in Egyptian hands. In 112 B.C. the empire of Syria
+was divided by Antiochus Grypus and Antiochus Cyzicenus;
+the city of Damascus fell to the share of the latter. Hyrcanus
+took advantage of the disputes of these rulers to advance his
+own kingdom. Demetrius Eucaerus, successor of Cyzicenus,
+invaded Palestine in 88 B.C., and defeated Alexander Jannaeus
+at Shechem. On his dethronement and captivity by the Parthians,
+Antiochus Dionysus, his brother, succeeded him, but was
+slain in battle by H&#257;ritha (Aretas) the Arab&mdash;the first instance of
+Arab interference with Damascene politics. H&#257;ritha yielded to
+Tigranes, king of Armenia, who in his turn was driven out by
+Q. Caecilius Metellus (son of Scipio Nasica), the Roman general.
+In 63 Syria was made a Roman province.</p>
+
+<p>In the New Testament Damascus appears only in connexion
+with the miraculous conversion of St Paul (Acts ix., xxii., xxvi.),
+his escape from Aretas the governor by being lowered in a basket
+over the wall (Acts ix. 25; 2 Cor. xi. 32, 33), and his return
+thither after his retirement in Arabia (Gal. i. 17).</p>
+
+<p>In 150, under Trajan, Damascus became a Roman provincial
+city.</p>
+
+<p>On the establishment of Christianity Damascus became the
+seat of a bishop who ranked next to the patriarch of Antioch.
+The great temple of Damascus was turned by Arcadius into
+a Christian church.</p>
+
+<p>In 635 Damascus was captured for Islam by Kh&#257;lid ibn Wal&#299;d,
+the great general of the new religion, being the first city to yield
+after the battle of the Yarmuk (Hieromax). After the murder
+of Ali, the fourth caliph, his successor Moawiya transferred the
+seat of the Caliphate (q.v.) from Mecca to Damascus and thus
+commenced the great dynasty of the Omayyads, whose rule
+extended from the Atlantic to India. This dynasty lasted about
+ninety years; it was supplanted by that of the Abbasids, who
+removed the seat of empire to Mesopotamia; and Damascus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page785" id="page785"></a>785</span>
+passed through a period of unrest in which it was captured and
+ravaged by Egyptians, Carmathians and Seljuks in turn. The
+crusaders attacked Damascus in 1126, but never succeeded in
+keeping a firm hold of it, even during their brief domination of the
+country. It was the headquarters of Saladin in the wars with
+the Franks. Of its later history we need only mention the
+Mongolian capture in 1260; its Egyptian recapture by the
+Mameluke Kotuz; the ferocious raid of Timur (Tamerlane) in
+1399; and the conquest by the Turkish sultan Selim, whereby
+it became a city of the Ottoman empire (1516). In its more
+recent history the only incidents that need be mentioned are
+its capture by Ibrahim Pasha, the Egyptian general, in 1832,
+when the city was first opened to the representatives of foreign
+powers; its revolt against Ibrahim&rsquo;s tyranny in 1834, which
+he crushed with the aid of the Druses; the return of the city
+to Turkish domination, when the Egyptians were driven out
+of Syria in 1840 by the allied powers; and the massacre of July
+1860, when the Moslem population rose against the Christians,
+burnt their quarter, and slaughtered about 3000 adult males.</p>
+
+<p><i>Modern City.</i>&mdash;Damascus is a city with a population estimated
+at from 154,000 (35,000 Christians and Jews) to 225,000 (55,000
+Christians and Jews), situated near the northern edge of a plain
+called the Ghutah, at the foot of Anti-Lebanon, 2250 ft. above
+the sea. The river Barada (the <i>Abanah</i> of 2 Kings v. 12) rises
+in the Anti-Lebanon, runs for about 10 m. in a narrow channel,
+and then spreads itself fan-wise over the plain. About 18 m.
+east of the city it loses itself in the marshlands known as the
+Meadow Lakes. A second river, the &rsquo;Awaj (possibly the <i>Pharpar</i>
+of 2 Kings), pursues a similar course. The plain is thus exceptionally
+well irrigated, and its consequent fertility is proverbial
+over the East. Damascus is situated on both banks of the
+Barada, about 2 m. from the exit of the river from the gorge.
+On the right bank is all the older part of the city, and a long
+suburb called El-Meid&#257;n extending about a mile along the Hajj
+Road. On the left bank are the suburbs El &lsquo;Am&#257;ara and El-Salihia.
+The waters of the river are carried by channels and
+conduits to all the houses of the city. The orchards, gardens,
+vineyards and fields of Damascus are said to extend over a
+circuit of at least 60 m. In the surrounding plain are one hundred
+and forty villages, occupied in all by about 50,000 persons (1000
+Christians, 2000 Druses).</p>
+
+<p>The rough mud walls in the private houses give poor promise
+of splendour within. The entrance is usually by a low door, and
+through a narrow winding passage which leads to the outer
+court, where the master has his reception room. From this
+another winding passage leads to the harem, which is the principal
+part of the house. The plan of all is the same&mdash;an open court,
+with a tesselated pavement, and one or two marble fountains;
+orange and lemon trees, flowering shrubs, and climbing plants
+give freshness and fragrance. All the apartments open into the
+court; and on the south side is an open alcove, with a marble
+floor, and raised dais round three sides, covered with cushions;
+the front wall is supported by an ornamented Saracenic arch.
+The decoration of some of the rooms is gorgeous, the walls being
+covered in part with mosaics and in part with carved work,
+while the ceilings are rich in arabesque ornaments, elaborately
+gilt. A few of the modern Jewish houses have been embellished
+at an enormous cost, but they are wanting in taste.</p>
+
+<p><i>Antiquities.</i>&mdash;Considering the great age of Damascus, its
+comparative poverty in antiquities is remarkable. The walls
+of the city seem to be Seleucid in origin; some of the Roman
+gateways being still in good order. The <i>Derb el-Mistak&#299;im</i>, or
+&ldquo;Straight Street,&rdquo; still runs through the city from the eastern
+to the western gate. At the north-west corner is a large castle
+built in A.D. 1219, by El-Malik el-Ashraf, on the site of an earlier
+palace. It is quadrangular, surrounded by a moat filled by the
+Barada. The outer walls are in good preservation, but the
+interior is ruined.</p>
+
+<p>The church of St John the Baptist constructed by Arcadius
+on the site of the temple was turned by Caliph Walid I. (705-717)
+to a mosque which was the most important building of Damascus.
+It was a structure 431 ft. by 125 ft. interior dimensions, extending
+along the south side of a quadrangle 163 yds. by 108 yds. Except
+the famous inscription over the door&mdash;&ldquo;Thy kingdom, O Christ,
+is an everlasting kingdom, and thy dominion endureth throughout
+all generations&rdquo;&mdash;every trace of Christianity was effaced from
+the church at its conversion. It was destroyed by fire on the
+14th of October 1893, and though it was subsequently rebuilt,
+much that was of archaeological and historical interest perished.
+It is estimated that there are over two hundred mosques in
+Damascus.</p>
+
+<p><i>Products, Manufactures, &amp;c.</i>&mdash;Damascus occupies an important
+commercial position, being the market for the whole of the desert;
+it also is of great importance religiously, as being the starting-point
+for the Hajj pilgrimage from Syria to Mecca, which leaves
+on the 15th of the lunar month of Shawwal each year. This of
+course brings much trade to the city. Its chief manufactures are
+silk work, cloths and cloaks, gold and silver ornaments, &amp;c.,
+brass and copper work, furniture and ornamental woodwork.
+The bazaars of Damascus are among the most famous of their
+kind. It is connected with Beirut and Mezerib by railway, and
+at the end of the past century the great undertaking of running
+a line to Mecca was commenced. In the surrounding gardens and
+fields walnuts, apricots, wheat, barley, maize, &amp;c. are grown.
+Its commercial importance is referred to by Ezekiel (xxvii. 18),
+who mentions its trade in wines and wool. The climate is good;
+in winter there is often hard frost and much snow, and even in
+summer, with a day temperature of 100° F., the nights are always
+cool. Fever, dysentery and ophthalmia, chiefly due to exposure
+to heavy dews and cold nights, are prevalent. Though still
+the market of the nomads, the surer and cheaper sea route has
+almost destroyed the transit trade to which it once owed its
+wealth, and has even diminished the importance of the annual
+pilgrim caravan to Mecca. The Damascene, however, still
+retains his skill as a craftsman and tiller of the soil. The chief
+imports are cloths, prints, muslins, raw silk, sugar, rice, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>The value of exports and imports in certain specified years
+is shown in the following table:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb">1890.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1894.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1898.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1905.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Exports</td> <td class="tcr rb">£325,660</td> <td class="tcr rb">£400,830</td> <td class="tcr rb">£302,050</td> <td class="tcr rb">£386,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Imports</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">525,710</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">614,490</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">675,080</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">872,400</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Most of the Christians belong to the Orthodox and Roman
+Catholic (United) Greek Churches; and there are also communities
+of Melchites, Jacobites, Maronites, Nestorians, Armenians and
+Protestants. There are Protestant missions, founded 1843, and
+a British hospital.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;Lortet, <i>La Syrie d&rsquo;aujourd&rsquo;hui</i>, p. 567 f. (Paris,
+1884); Von Oppenheim, <i>Vom Mittelmeer zum Persischen Golf</i>, i.
+49 f. (Berlin, 1899); G. A. Smith, <i>Historical Geography of the Holy
+Land</i>; <i>Encyclopaedia Biblica</i>, art. &ldquo;Damascus&rdquo;; Consular Reports;
+Baedeker-Socin, <i>Handbook to Syria and Palestine</i>. For the Great
+Mosque see Dickie, Phené Spiers, and Sir C. W. Wilson in <i>Palestine
+Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement</i>, Oct. 1897.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(R. A. S. M.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+
+<table class="flt" style="float: right; width: 350px;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figright1"><img style="width:305px; height:368px" src="images/img786.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="bold">DAMASK,<a name="ar60" id="ar60"></a></span> the technical term applied to certain distinct types
+of fabric. The term owes its origin to the ornamental silk fabrics
+of Damascus, fabrics which were elaborately woven in colours,
+sometimes with the addition of gold and other metallic threads.
+At the present day it denotes a linen texture richly figured in
+the weaving with flowers, fruit, forms of animal life, and other
+types of ornament. &ldquo;China, no doubt,&rdquo; says Dr Rock (<i>Catalogue
+of Textile Fabrics</i>, Victoria and Albert Museum), &ldquo;was the first
+country to ornament its silken webs with a pattern. India,
+Persia, and Syria, then Byzantine Greece followed, but at long
+intervals between, in China&rsquo;s footsteps. Stuffs so figured brought
+with them to the West the name &lsquo;diaspron&rsquo; or diaper, bestowed
+upon them at Constantinople. But about the 12th century the
+city of Damascus, even then long celebrated for its looms, so
+far outstripped all other places for beauty of design, that her
+silken textiles were in demand everywhere; and thus, as often
+happens, traders fastened the name of damascen or damask upon
+every silken fabric richly wrought and curiously designed, no
+matter whether it came or not from Damascus.&rdquo; The term is
+perhaps now best known in reference to damask table-cloths, a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page786" id="page786"></a>786</span>
+species of figured cloth usually of flax or tow yarns, but sometimes
+made partly of cotton. The finer qualities are made of the best
+linen yarn, and, although the latter is of a brownish colour during
+the weaving processes, the ultimate fabric is pure white. The
+high lights in these cloths are obtained by long floats of warp
+and weft, and, as these are set at right angles, they reflect the
+light differently according to the angle of the rays of light; the
+effect changes also with the position of the observer. Subdued
+effects are produced by shorter floats of yarn, and sometimes
+by special weaves. Any subject, however intricate, can be
+copied by this method of weaving, provided that expense is no
+object. The finest results are obtained when the so-called
+double damask weaves are used. These weaves are shown under
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Die</a></span>, and it will be seen that each weave gives a maximum float
+of seven threads. (In some special cases a weave is used which
+gives a float of nine.) The small figure here shown to illustrate
+a small section of a damask design is composed of the two single
+damask weaves; these give a maximum float of four threads or
+picks. No shading is shown in the design, and this for two
+reasons&mdash;(1) the single damask weaves do not permit of
+elaborate shading, although some very good effects are obtainable;
+(2) the available space is not sufficiently large to show the
+method to advantage. The different single damask weaves used
+in the shading of these
+cloths appear, however,
+at the bottom of the
+figure, while between
+these and the design
+proper there is an illustration
+of the thirty-first
+pick interweaving with all
+the forty-eight threads.</p>
+
+<p>The principal British
+centres for fine damasks
+are Belfast and Dunfermline,
+while the medium
+qualities are made in
+several places in Ireland,
+in a few places in England,
+and in the counties of
+Fife, Forfar and Perth
+in Scotland. Cotton
+damasks, which are made
+in Paisley, Glasgow, and several places in Lancashire, are
+used for toilet covers, table-cloths, and similar purposes. They
+are often ornamented with colours and sent to the Indian and
+West Indian markets. Silk damasks for curtains and upholstery
+decoration are made in the silk-weaving centres.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMASK STEEL,<a name="ar61" id="ar61"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Damascus Steel</span>, a steel with a peculiar
+watered or streaked appearance, as seen in the blades of fine
+swords and other weapons of Oriental manufacture. One way of
+producing this appearance is to twist together strips of iron and
+steel of different quality and then weld them into a solid mass.
+A similar but inferior result may be obtained by etching with
+acid the surface of a metal; parts of which are protected by some
+greasy substance in such a way as to give the watered pattern
+desired. The art of producing damask steel has been generally
+practised in Oriental countries from a remote period, the most
+famous blades having come from Isfahan, Khorasan, and
+Shiraz in Persia.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMASUS,<a name="ar62" id="ar62"></a></span> the name of two popes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Damasus I.</span> was pope from 366 to 384. At the time of the
+banishment of Pope Liberius (355), the deacon Damasus, like
+all the Roman clergy, made energetic protest. When, however,
+the emperor Constantius sent to Rome an anti-pope in the
+person of Felix II., Damasus, with the other clergy, rallied to
+his cause. When Liberius returned from exile and Felix was
+expelled from Rome, Damasus again took his place among the
+adherents of Liberius. On the death of Liberius (366) a considerable
+party nominated Damasus successor; but the irreconcilables
+of the party of Liberius refused to pardon his trimming,
+and set up against him another deacon, Ursinus. A serious
+conflict ensued between the rival factions, which quickly led to
+rioting and hand-to-hand fighting. In one of these encounters
+the then new basilica, called the Liberian Basilica (S. Maria
+Maggiore), was partially destroyed, and 137 dead bodies were
+left in the building. On several occasions the secular arm had to
+intervene, although the government of the emperor Valentinian
+was averse from involving itself in ecclesiastical affairs. From
+the outset the prefect of Rome recognized the claims of Damasus,
+and exerted himself to support him. Ursinus and the leading
+men of his faction were expelled from Rome, and afterwards
+from central Italy, or even interned in Gaul. They, however,
+persisted obstinately in their opposition to Damasus, combating
+him at first by riots, and then by calumnious law-suits, such as
+that instituted by one Isaac, a converted and relapsed Jew.</p>
+
+<p>To the official support, which never failed him, Damasus
+endeavoured to join the popular sympathy. From before his
+election he had been in high favour with the Roman aristocracy,
+and especially with the great ladies. At that period the urban
+masses, but recently converted to Christianity, sought in the
+worship of the martyrs a sort of substitute for polytheism.
+Damasus showed great zeal in discovering the tombs of martyrs,
+adorning them with precious marbles and monumental inscriptions.
+The inscriptions he composed himself, in mediocre
+verse, full of Virgilian reminiscences. Several have come down
+to us on the original marbles, entire or in fragments; others are
+known from old copies. In the interior of Rome he erected or
+embellished the church which still bears his name (S. Lorenzo
+in Damaso), near which his father&rsquo;s house appears to have
+stood.</p>
+
+<p>The West was recovering gradually from the troubles caused
+by the Arian crisis. Damasus took part, more or less effectually,
+in the efforts to eliminate from Italy and Illyria the last champions
+of the council of Rimini. In spite of his declaration at
+the council convened by him in 372, he did not succeed in
+evicting Auxentius from Milan. But Auxentius died soon
+afterwards, and his successor, Ambrose, undertook to bring
+these hitherto abortive efforts to a successful conclusion, and to
+complete the return of Illyria to the confessions of Nicaea. The
+bishops of the East, however, under the direction of St Basil,
+were involved in a struggle with the emperor Valens, whose
+policy was favourable to the council of Rimini. Damasus, to
+whom they appealed for help, was unable to be of much service
+to them, the more so because that episcopal group, viewed
+askance by St Athanasius and his successor Peter, was incessantly
+combated at the papal court by the inveterate hatred of
+Alexandria. The Eastern bishops triumphed in the end under
+Theodosius, at the council of Constantinople (381), in which
+the pope and the Western church took no part. They were
+invited to a council of wider convocation, held at Rome in 382,
+but very few attended.</p>
+
+<p>This council had brought to Rome the learned monk Jerome,
+for whom Damasus showed great esteem. To him Damasus
+entrusted the revision of the Latin text of the Bible and other
+works of religious erudition. A short time before, the pope had
+received a visit from the Priscillianists after their condemnation
+in Spain, and had dismissed them. Damasus died in 384, on
+the 11th of December, the day on which his memory is still
+celebrated.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Damasus II.</span>, pope from the 17th of July to the 9th of August
+1048, was the ephemeral successor of Clement II. His original
+name was Poppo, and he was bishop of Brixen when the emperor
+Henry III. raised him to the papacy.</p>
+<div class="author">(L. D.*)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMAUN<a name="ar63" id="ar63"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Daman</span>, a town of Portuguese India, capital of
+the settlement of Damaun, situated on the east side of the
+entrance of the Gulf of Cambay within the Bombay Presidency.
+The area of the settlement is 82 sq. m. Pop. (1900) 41,671.
+The settlement is divided into two parts, Damaun proper, and
+the larger <i>pargana</i> of Nagar Havili, the two being separated
+by a narrow strip of British territory. The soil is fertile, and rice,
+wheat and tobacco are the chief crops. The teak forests are
+valuable. Weaving is an industry less important than formerly;
+mats and baskets are manufactured, and deep-sea fishing is an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page787" id="page787"></a>787</span>
+important industry. The shipbuilding business at the town
+of Damaun is important. Early in the 19th century a large
+transit trade in opium between Karachi and China was carried
+on at Damaun, but it ceased in 1837, when the British prohibited
+it after their conquest of Sind. The settlement is administered as
+a unit, and has a municipal chamber.</p>
+
+<p>Damaun town was sacked and burnt by the Portuguese in
+1531. It was subsequently rebuilt, and in 1558 was again taken
+by the Portuguese, who made a permanent settlement and
+converted the mosque into a Christian church. From that time
+it has remained in their hands. The territory of Damaun proper
+was conquered by the Portuguese in 1559; that of Nagar Havili
+was ceded to them by the Mahrattas in 1780 in indemnification
+for piracy.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAME<a name="ar64" id="ar64"></a></span> (through the Fr. from Lat. <i>domina</i>, mistress, lady,
+the feminine of <i>dominus</i>, master, lord), properly a name of
+respect or a title equivalent to &ldquo;lady,&rdquo; now surviving in English
+as the legal designation of the wife or widow of a baronet or knight
+and prefixed to the Christian name and surname. It has also
+been used in modern times by certain societies or orders, e.g. the
+Primrose League, as the name of a certain rank among the lady
+members, answering to the male rank of knight. The ordinary
+use of the word by itself is for an old woman. As meaning
+&ldquo;mistress,&rdquo; i.e. teacher, &ldquo;dame&rdquo; was used of the female keepers
+of schools for young children, which have become obsolete since
+the advance of public elementary education. At Eton College
+boarding-houses kept by persons other than members of the
+teaching staff of the school were known as &ldquo;Dames&rsquo; Houses,&rdquo;
+though the head might not necessarily be a lady. As a term of
+address to ladies of all ranks, from the sovereign down, &ldquo;madam,&rdquo;
+shortened to &ldquo;ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; represents the French <i>madame</i>, my
+lady.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Damsel,&rdquo; a young girl or maiden, now only used as a literary
+word, is taken from the Old French <i>dameisele</i>, formed from <i>dame</i>,
+and parallel with the popular <i>dansele</i> or <i>doncele</i> from the medieval
+Latin <i>domicella</i> or <i>dominicella</i>, diminutive of <i>domina</i>. The
+French <i>damoiselle</i> and <i>demoiselle</i> are later formations. The
+English literary form &ldquo;damosel&rdquo; was another importation from
+France in the 15th century. In the early middle ages <i>damoiseau</i>,
+medieval Latin <i>domicellus</i>, <i>dameicele</i>, <i>damoiselle</i>, <i>domicella</i>, were
+used as titles of honour for the unmarried sons and daughters
+of royal persons and lords (<i>seigneurs</i>). Later the <i>damoiseau</i>
+(in the south <i>donzel</i>, in Béarn <i>domengar</i>) was specifically a young
+man of gentle birth who aspired to knighthood, equivalent to
+<i>écuyer</i>, esquire, or valet (q.v.). The <i>damoiseau</i> performed certain
+functions and received training in knightly accomplishments
+in the domestic service of his lord. Later again the name was
+also used of nobles who had not been knighted. In certain
+<i>seigneuries</i> in France, notably in that of Commercy, in Lorraine,
+<i>damoiseau</i> became the permanent title of the holder. In England
+the title, when used by the French-speaking nobility and members
+of the court, was only applied to the son or grandson of the king;
+thus in the <i>Laws of Edward the Confessor</i>, quoted in Du Cange
+(<i>Glossarium, s.v. Domicellus</i>), we find &ldquo;Rex vero Edgarum ...
+pro filio nutrivit et quia cogitavit ipsum heredem facere, nominavit
+<i>Ethelinge</i>, quod nos Domicellum, id, <i>Damisell</i>; sed nos
+indiscrete de pluribus dicimus, quia Baronum filios vocamus
+domicellos, Angli vero nullos nisi natos regum.&rdquo; Froissart
+calls Richard II. during the lifetime of his father the Black
+Prince, <i>le jeune Demoisel</i>. The use of <i>damoiselle</i> followed much
+the same development; it was first applied to the unmarried
+daughters of royal persons and <i>seigneurs</i>, then to the wife of a
+<i>damoiseau</i>, and also to the young ladies of gentle birth who
+performed for the wives of the <i>seigneurs</i> the same domestic
+services as the <i>damoiseaus</i> for their husbands. Hence the later
+form <i>demoiselle</i> became merely the title of address of a young
+unmarried lady, the <i>mademoiselle</i> of modern usage, the English
+&ldquo;miss.&rdquo; At the court of France, after the 17th century,
+<i>Mademoiselle</i>, without the name of the lady, was a courtesy
+title given to the eldest daughter of the eldest brother of the king,
+who was known as <i>Monsieur</i>. To distinguish the daughter of
+Gaston d&rsquo;Orléans, brother of Louis XIII., from the daughter of
+Philippe d&rsquo;Orléans, brother of Louis XIV., the former, Anne
+Marie Louise, duchesse de Montpensier, was called <i>La Grande
+Mademoiselle</i>, by which title she is known to history (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Montpensier,
+A. M. L., Duchesse de</a></span>).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAME&rsquo;S VIOLET,<a name="ar65" id="ar65"></a></span> the English name for <i>Hesperis matronalis</i>,
+a herbaceous plant belonging to the natural order Cruciferae,
+and closely allied to the wallflower and stock. It has an erect
+stout leafy stem 2 to 3 ft. high, with irregularly toothed short-stalked
+leaves and white or lilac flowers, ¾ in. across, which are
+scented in the evening (hence the name of the genus, from the
+Gr. <span class="grk" title="hesperos">&#7957;&#963;&#960;&#949;&#961;&#959;&#962;</span>, evening). The slender pods are constricted between
+the seeds. The plant is a native of Europe and temperate
+Asia, and is found in Britain as an escape from gardens, in
+meadows and plantations.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMGHAN,<a name="ar66" id="ar66"></a></span> a town of Persia in the province of Semnan va
+Damghan, 216 m. from Teheran on the high-road thence to
+Khorasan, at an elevation of 3770 ft. and in 36° 10&prime; N., 54° 20&prime; E.
+Pop. about 10,000. There are post and telegraph offices, and
+a great export trade is done in pistachios and almonds, the latter
+being of the kind called <i>Kaghazi</i> (&ldquo;of paper&rdquo;) with very thin
+shells, famous throughout the country. Damghan was an important
+city in the middle ages, but only a ruined mosque with
+a number of massive columns and some fine wood carvings
+and two minarets of the 11th century remain of that period.
+Near the city, a few miles south and south-west, are the remains
+of Hecatompylos, extending from Frat, 16 m. south of Damghan,
+to near Gúsheh, 20 m. west. Damghan was destroyed by the
+Afghans in 1723. On an eminence in the western part of the
+city are the ruins of a large square citadel with a small white-washed
+building, called <i>Mol&#363;d Khaneh</i> (the house of birth), in
+which Fath Ali Shah was born (1772).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMIANI, PIETRO<a name="ar67" id="ar67"></a></span> (<i>c.</i> 1007-1072), one of the most celebrated
+ecclesiastics of the 11th century, was born at Ravenna, and after
+a youth spent in hardship and privation, gained some renown
+as a teacher. About 1035, however, he deserted his secular
+calling and entered the hermitage of Fonte Avellana, near
+Gubbio; and winning sound reputation through his piety and
+his preaching, he became the head of this establishment about
+1043. A zealot for monastic and clerical reform, he introduced
+a more severe discipline, including the practice of flagellation,
+into the house, which, under his rule, quickly attained celebrity,
+and became a model for other foundations. Extending the area
+of his activities, he entered into communication with the emperor
+Henry III., addressed to Pope Leo IX. in 1049 a writing denouncing
+the vices of the clergy and entitled <i>Liber Gomorrhianus</i>;
+and soon became associated with Hildebrand in the work of
+reform. As a trusted counsellor of a succession of popes he was
+made cardinal bishop of Ostia, a position which he accepted
+with some reluctance; and presiding over a council at Milan in
+1059, he courageously asserted the authority of Rome over this
+province, and won a signal victory for the principles which he
+advocated. He rendered valuable assistance to Pope Alexander
+II. in his struggle with the anti-pope, Honorius II.; and having
+served the papacy as legate to France and to Florence, he was
+allowed to resign his bishopric in 1067. After a period of retirement
+at Fonte Avellana, he proceeded in 1069 as papal legate to
+Germany, and persuaded the emperor Henry IV. to give up his
+intention of divorcing his wife Bertha. During his concluding
+years he was not altogether in accord with the political ideas of
+Hildebrand. He died at Faenza on the 22nd of February 1072.
+Damiani was a determined foe of simony, but his fiercest wrath
+was directed against the married clergy. He was an extremely
+vigorous controversialist, and his Latin abounds in denunciatory
+epithets. He was specially devoted to the Virgin Mary, and
+wrote an <i>Officium Beatae Virginis</i>, in addition to many letters,
+sermons, and other writings.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>His works were collected by Cardinal Cajetan, and were published
+in four volumes at Rome (1606-1615), and then at Paris in 1642,
+at Venice in 1743, and there are other editions. See A. Vogel, <i>Peter
+Damiani</i> (Jena, 1856); A. Capecelatro, <i>Storia di S. Pier Damiani e
+del suo tempo</i> (Florence, 1862); F. Neukirch, <i>Das Leben des Peter
+Damiani</i> (Göttingen, 1875); L. Guerrier, <i>De Petro Damiano</i> (Orleans,
+1881); W. von Giesebrecht, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Kaiserzeit</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page788" id="page788"></a>788</span>
+(Leipzig, 1885-1890); and Herzog-Hauck, <i>Realencyklopädie</i>, Band
+iv. (Leipzig, 1898).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMIEN, FATHER,<a name="ar68" id="ar68"></a></span> the name in religion of <span class="sc">Joseph de
+Veuster</span> (1840-1889), Belgian missionary, was born at Tremeloo,
+near Louvain, on the 3rd of January 1840. He was educated for
+a business career, but in his eighteenth year entered the Church,
+joining the Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and Mary (also
+known as the Picpus Congregation), and taking Damien as his
+name in religion. In October 1863, while he was still in minor
+orders, he went out as a missionary to the Pacific Islands, taking
+the place of his brother, who had been prevented by an illness.
+He reached Honolulu in March 1864, and was ordained priest in
+Whitsuntide of that year. Struck with the sad condition of the
+lepers, whom it was the practice of the Hawaian government to
+deport to the island of Molokai, he conceived an earnest desire
+to mitigate their lot, and in 1873 volunteered to take spiritual
+charge of the settlement at Molokai. Here he remained for the
+rest of his life, with occasional visits to Honolulu, until he became
+stricken with leprosy in 1885. Besides attending to the spiritual
+needs of the lepers, he managed, by the labour of his own hands
+and by appeals to the Hawaian government, to improve materially
+the water-supply, the dwellings, and the victualling of the
+settlement. For five years he worked alone; subsequently
+other resident priests from time to time assisted him. He succumbed
+to leprosy on the 15th of April 1889. Some ill-considered
+imputations upon Father Damien by a Presbyterian minister
+produced a memorable tract by Robert Louis Stevenson (<i>An
+Open Letter to the Rev. Dr Hyde</i>, 1890).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See also lives by E. Clifford (1889) and Fr. Pamphile (1889).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(J. M&lsquo;F.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMIENS, ROBERT FRANÇOIS<a name="ar69" id="ar69"></a></span> (1715-1757), a Frenchman
+who attained notoriety by his attack on Louis XV. of France in
+1757, was born in a village near Arras in 1715, and early enlisted
+in the army. After his discharge, he became a menial in the
+college of the Jesuits in Paris, and was dismissed from this as
+well as from other employments for misconduct, his conduct
+earning for him the name of Robert le Diable. During the
+disputes of Clement XI. with the parlement of Paris the mind
+of Damiens seems to have been excited by the ecclesiastical
+disorganization which followed the refusal of the clergy to grant
+the sacraments to the Jansenists and Convulsionnaires; and he
+appears to have thought that peace would be restored by the
+death of the king. He, however, asserted, perhaps with truth,
+that he only intended to frighten the king without wounding
+him severely. On the 5th of January 1757, as the king was
+entering his carriage, he rushed forward and stabbed him with a
+knife, inflicting only a slight wound. He made no attempt to
+escape, and was at once seized. He was condemned as a regicide,
+and sentenced to be torn in pieces by horses in the Place de
+Grève. Before being put to death he was barbarously tortured
+with red-hot pincers, and molten wax, lead, and boiling oil were
+poured into his wounds. After his death his house was razed to
+the ground, his brothers and sisters were ordered to change their
+names, and his father, wife, and daughter were banished from
+France.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>Pièces originales et procédures du procès fait à Robert François
+Damiens</i> (Paris, 1757).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMIETTA,<a name="ar70" id="ar70"></a></span> a town of Lower Egypt, on the eastern (Damietta
+or Phatnitic) branch of the Nile, about 12 m. above its mouth,
+and 125 m. N.N.E. of Cairo by rail. Pop. (1907) 29,354.
+The town is built on the east bank of the river between it and
+Lake Menzala. Though in general ill-built and partly ruinous,
+the town possesses some fine mosques, with lofty minarets,
+public baths and busy bazaars. Along the river-front are many
+substantial houses furnished with terraces, and with steps leading
+to the water. Their wooden lattices of saw-work are very
+graceful. After Cairo and Alexandria, Damietta was for centuries
+the largest town in Egypt, but the silting up of the entrance
+to the harbour, the rise of Port Said, and the remarkable development
+of Alexandria have robbed Damietta of its value as a port.
+It has still, however, a coasting trade with Syria and the Levant.
+Ships over 6 ft. draught cannot enter the river, but must anchor
+in the offing. Lake Menzala yields large supplies of fish, which
+are dried and salted, and these, with rice, furnish the chief articles
+of trade.</p>
+
+<p>Damietta is a Levantine corruption of the Coptic name
+<i>Tamiati</i>, Arabic <i>Dimy&#257;t</i>. The original town was 4 m. nearer
+the sea than the modern city, and first rose into importance on
+the decay of Pelusium. When it passed into the hands of the
+Saracens it became a place of great wealth and commerce, and,
+as the eastern bulwark of Egypt, was frequently attacked by the
+crusaders. The most remarkable of these sieges lasted eighteen
+months, from June 1218 to November 1219, and ended in the
+capture of the town, which was, however, held but for a brief
+period. In June 1249 Louis IX. of France occupied Damietta
+without opposition, but being defeated near Mansura in the
+February following, and compelled (6th April) to surrender
+himself prisoner, Damietta was restored to the Moslems as part
+of the ransom exacted. To prevent further attacks from the sea
+the Mameluke sultan Bibars blocked up the Phatnitic mouth of
+the Nile (about 1260), razed old Damietta to the ground, and
+transferred the inhabitants to the site of the modern town. It
+continued to be a place of commercial importance for a considerable
+period, until in fact Port Said gave the eastern part of
+the Delta a better port. Damietta gives its name to dimity, a
+kind of striped cloth, for which the place was at one time famous.
+Cotton and silk goods are still manufactured here.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMIRI,<a name="ar71" id="ar71"></a></span> the common name of <span class="sc">Kam&#257;l ud-D&#299;n Muhammad ibn
+M&#363;s&#257; ud-Dam&#299;r&#299;</span> (1344-1405), Arabian writer on canon law and
+natural history, belonged to one of the two towns called Dam&#299;ra
+near Damietta and spent his life in Egypt. Of the Shafi&rsquo;ite school
+of law, he became professor of tradition in the <i>Rukn&#299;yya</i> at Cairo,
+and also at the mosque el-Azhar; in connexion with this work
+he wrote a commentary on the <i>Minh&#257;j ut-T&#257;libin</i> of Naw&#257;wi
+(q.v.). He is, however, better known in the history of literature
+for his <i>Life of Animals</i> (<i>Hay&#257;t ul-Hayaw&#257;n</i>), which treats in
+alphabetic order of 931 animals mentioned in the Koran, the
+traditions and the poetical and proverbial literature of the Arabs.
+The work is a compilation from over 500 prose writers and nearly
+200 poets. The correct spelling of the names of the animals is
+given with an explanation of their meanings. The use of the
+animals in medicine, their lawfulness or unlawfulness as food,
+their position in folk-lore are the main subjects treated, while
+occasionally long irrelevant sections on political history are
+introduced.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The work exists in three forms. The fullest has been published
+several times in Egypt; a mediate and a short recension exist in
+manuscript. Several editions have been made at various times of
+extracts, among them the poetical one by Suy&#363;ti (q.v.), which was
+translated into Latin by A. Ecchelensis (Paris, 1667). Bochartus
+in his <i>Hierozoicon</i> (1663) used Dam&#299;r&#299;&rsquo;s work. There is a translation
+of the whole into English by Lieutenant-Colonel Jayakar (Bombay,
+1906-1908).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(G. W. T.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMIRON, JEAN PHILIBERT<a name="ar72" id="ar72"></a></span> (1794-1862), French philosopher,
+was born at Belleville. At nineteen he entered the
+normal school, where he studied under Burnouf, Villemain, and
+Cousin. After teaching for several years in provincial towns, he
+came to Paris, where he lectured on philosophy in various institutions,
+and finally became professor in the normal school,
+and titular professor at the Sorbonne. In 1824 he took part
+with P. F. Dubois and Th. S. Jouffroy in the establishment of
+the <i>Globe</i>; and he was also a member of the committee of the
+society which took for its motto <i>Aide-toi, le ciel t&rsquo;aidera</i>. In
+1833 he was appointed chevalier of the Legion of Honour, and in
+1836 member of the Academy of Moral Sciences. Damiron died
+at Paris on the 11th of January 1862.</p>
+
+<p>The chief works of Damiron, of which the best are his accounts
+of French philosophers, are the following:&mdash;An edition of the
+<i>Nouveaux mélanges philosophiques de Jouffroy</i> (1842), with a
+notice of the author, in which Damiron softened and omitted
+several expressions used by Jouffroy, which were opposed to the
+system of education adopted by the Sorbonne, an article which
+gave rise to a bitter controversy, and to a book by Pierre Leroux,
+<i>De la mutilation des manuscrits de M. Jouffroy</i> (1843); <i>Essai sur
+l&rsquo;histoire de la philosophie en France au XIX<span class="sp">e</span> siècle</i> (1828, 3rd ed.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page789" id="page789"></a>789</span>
+1834); <i>Essai sur l&rsquo;histoire de la philosophie en France au XVII.
+siècle</i> (1846); <i>Mémoires à servir pour l&rsquo;histoire de la philosophie
+en France au XVIII. siècle</i> (1858-1864); <i>Cours de la philosophie</i>;
+<i>De la Providence</i> (1849, 1850).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See A. Franck, <i>Moralistes et philosophes</i> (1872).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMJANICH, JÁNOS<a name="ar73" id="ar73"></a></span> (1804-1849), Hungarian soldier, was
+born at Stása in the Banat. He entered the army as an officer
+in the 61st regiment of foot, and on the outbreak of the Hungarian
+war of independence was promoted to be a major in the
+third Honvéd regiment at Szeged. Although an orthodox Serb,
+he was from the first a devoted adherent of the Magyar liberals.
+He won his colonelcy by his ability and valour at the battles of
+Alibunár and Lagerdorf in 1848. At the beginning of 1849 he
+was appointed commander of the 3rd army corps in the middle
+Theiss, and quickly gained the reputation of being the bravest
+man in the Magyar army, winning engagement after engagement
+by sheer dash and daring. At the beginning of March 1849 he
+annihilated a brigade at Szolnók, perhaps his greatest exploit.
+He was elected deputy for Szolnók to the Hungarian diet, but
+declined the honour. Damjanich played a leading part in the
+general advance upon the Hungarian capital under Görgei. He
+was present at the engagements of Hort and Hatvan, converted
+the doubtful fight of Tápió-Bicsk into a victory, and fought
+with irresistible <i>élan</i> at the bloody battle of Isaszeg. At the
+ensuing review at Gödöllö, Kossuth expressed the sentiments of
+the whole nation when he doffed his hat as Damjanich&rsquo;s battalions
+passed by. Always a fiery democrat, Damjanich uncompromisingly
+supported the extremist views of Kossuth, and was
+appointed commander of one of the three divisions which, under
+Görgei, entered V&#257;cz in April 1849. His fame reached its
+culmination when, on the 19th of April, he won the battle of
+Nagysarló, which led to the relief of the hardly-pressed fortress
+of Komárom. At this juncture Damjanich broke his leg, an
+accident which prevented him from taking part in field operations
+at the most critical period of the war, when the Magyars
+had to abandon the capital for the second time. He recovered
+sufficiently, however, to accept the post of commandant of the
+fortress of Arad. After the Vilagós catastrophe, Damjanich, on
+being summoned to surrender, declared he would give up the
+fortress to a single company of Cossacks, but would defend it to
+the last drop of his blood against the whole Austrian army. He
+accordingly surrendered to the Russian general Demitrius
+Buturlin (1790-1849), by whom he was handed over to the
+Austrians, who shot him in the market-place of Arad a few days
+later.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Ödön Hamvay, <i>Life of János Damjanich</i> (Hung.), (Budapest,
+1904).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(R. N. B.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMMAR,<a name="ar74" id="ar74"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Dammer</span> (Hind, <i>damar</i> = resin, pitch), a resin,
+or rather series of resins, obtained from various coniferous trees
+of the genus <i>Dammara</i> (<i>Agathis</i>). East Indian dammar or cat&rsquo;s
+eye resin is the produce of <i>Dammara orientalis</i>, which grows in
+Java, Sumatra, Borneo and other eastern islands and sometimes
+attains a height of 80-100 ft. It oozes in large quantities
+from the tree in a soft viscous state, with a highly aromatic
+odour, which, however, it loses as it hardens by exposure. The
+resin is much esteemed in oriental communities for incense-burning.
+Dammar is imported into England by way of Singapore;
+and as found in British markets it is a hard, transparent,
+brittle, straw-coloured resin, destitute of odour. It is readily
+soluble in ether, benzol and chloroform, and with oil of turpentine
+it forms a fine transparent varnish which dries clear, smooth and
+hard. The allied kauri gum, or dammar of New Zealand
+(Australian dammar), is produced by <i>Dammara australis</i>, or
+kauri-pine, the wood of which is used for wood paving. Much of
+the New Zealand resin is found fossil in circumstances analogous
+to the conditions under which the fossil copal of Zanzibar is
+obtained. Dammar is besides a generic Indian name for various
+other resins, which, however, are little known in western commerce.
+Of these the principal are black dammar (the Hindustani
+<i>kala-damar</i>), yielded by <i>Canarium strictum</i>, and white dammar,
+Indian copal, or piney varnish (<i>sufed-damar</i>), the produce of
+<i>Vateria indica</i>. Sal dammar (<i>damar</i>) is obtained from <i>Shorea
+robusta</i>; <i>Hopea micrantha</i> is the source of rock dammar (the
+Malay <i>dammer-batu</i>); and other species yield resins which are
+similarly named and differ little in physical properties.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMMARTIN,<a name="ar75" id="ar75"></a></span> a small town of France, in the department of
+Seine et Marne, 22 m. N.E. of Paris. It is well situated on a
+hill forming part of the plateau of la Goële, and is known as
+Dammartin-en-Goële to distinguish it from Dammartin-sous-Tigeaux,
+a small commune in the same department. Dammartin
+is historically important as the seat of a countship of which the
+holders played a considerable part in French history. The
+earliest recorded count of Dammartin was a certain Hugh, who
+made himself master of the town in the 10th century; but his
+dynasty was replaced by another family in the 11th century.
+Reynald I. (Renaud), count of Dammartin (d. 1227), who was
+one of the coalition crushed by King Philip Augustus at the
+battle of Bouvines (1214), left two co-heiresses, of whom the
+elder, Maud (Matilda or Mahaut), married Philip Hurepel, son
+of Philip Augustus, and the second, Alix, married Jean de Trie,
+in whose line the countship was reunited after the death of
+Philip Hurepel&rsquo;s son Alberic. The countship passed, through
+heiresses, to the houses of Fayel and Nanteuil, and in the 15th
+century was acquired by Antoine de Chabannes (d. 1488), one
+of the favourites of King Charles VII., by his marriage with
+Marguerite, heiress of Reynald V. of Nanteuil-Aci and Marie of
+Dammartin. This Antoine de Chabannes, count of Dammartin
+in right of his wife, fought under the standard of Joan of Arc,
+became a leader of the <i>Écorcheurs</i>, took part in the war of the
+public weal against Louis XI., and then fought for him against
+the Burgundians. The collegiate church at Dammartin was
+founded by him in 1480, and his tomb and effigy are in the
+chancel. His son, Jean de Chabannes, left three heiresses,
+of whom the second left a daughter who brought the countship
+to Philippe de Boulainvilliers, by whose heirs it was sold in
+1554 to the dukes of Montmorency. In 1632 the countship was
+confiscated by Louis XIII. and bestowed on the princes of
+Condé.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMME,<a name="ar76" id="ar76"></a></span> a decayed city of Belgium, 5 m. N.E. of Bruges,
+once among the most important commercial ports of Europe.
+It is situated on the canal from Bruges to Sluys (Ecluse), but
+in the middle ages a navigable channel or river called the Zwyn
+gave ships access to it from the North Sea. The great naval
+battle of Sluys, in which Edward III. destroyed the French
+fleet and secured the command of the channel, was fought in
+the year 1340 at the mouth of the Zwyn. About 1395 this
+channel began to show signs of silting up, and during the next
+hundred years the process proved rapid. In 1490 a treaty was
+signed at Damme between the people of Bruges and the archduke
+Maximilian, and very soon after this event the channel became
+completely closed up, and the foreign merchant gilds or &ldquo;nations&rdquo;
+left the place for Antwerp. This signified the death of the port
+and was indirectly fatal to Bruges as well. The marriage of
+Charles the Bold and Margaret of York, sister of Edward IV.,
+was celebrated at Damme on the 2nd of July 1468. It will give
+some idea of the importance of the town to mention that it had
+its own maritime law, known as <i>Droit maritime de Damme</i>. The
+new ship canal from Zeebrugge will not revive the ancient port,
+as it follows a different route, leaving Damme and Ecluse quite
+untouched. Damme, although long neglected, preserves some
+remains of its former prosperity, thanks to its remoteness from
+the area of international strife in the Low Countries. The tower
+of Notre Dame, dating from 1180, is a landmark across the
+dunes, and the church behind it, although a shell, merits inspection.
+Out of a portion of the ancient markets a hôtel-de-ville
+of modest dimensions has been constructed, and in the
+hospital of St Jean are a few pictures. Camille Lemonnier has
+given in one of his <i>Causeries</i> a striking picture of this faded
+scene of former greatness, now a solitude in which the few
+residents seem spectres rather than living figures.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMOCLES,<a name="ar77" id="ar77"></a></span> one of the courtiers of the elder Dionysius of
+Syracuse. When he spoke in extravagant terms of the happiness
+of his sovereign, Dionysius is said to have invited him to a
+sumptuous banquet, at which he found himself seated under
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page790" id="page790"></a>790</span>
+a naked sword suspended by a single hair (Cicero, <i>Tusc.</i> v. 21;
+Horace, <i>Odes</i>, iii. 1, 17; Persius iii. 40).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMOH,<a name="ar78" id="ar78"></a></span> a town and district of British India, in the Jubbulpore
+division of the Central Provinces. The town has a railway
+station, 48 m. E. of Saugor. Pop. (1901) 13,355. It has a considerable
+cattle-market, and a number of small industries, such
+as weaving, dyeing and pottery-making.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="sc">District of Damoh</span> has an area of 2816 sq. m. Except
+on the south and east, where the offshoots from the surrounding
+hills and patches of jungle break up the country, the district
+consists of open plains of varying degrees of fertility, interspersed
+with low ranges and isolated heights. The richest tracts lie in
+the centre. The gentle declivity of the surface and the porous
+character of the prevailing sandstone formation render the
+drainage excellent. All the streams flow from south to north.
+The Sunar and the Bairma, the two principal rivers, traverse
+the entire length of the district. Little use has been made of
+any of the rivers for irrigation, though in many places they offer
+great facilities for the purpose. Damoh was first formed into
+a separate district in 1861. In 1901 the population was 285,326,
+showing a decrease of 12% in one decade due to famine. Damoh
+suffered severely from the famine of 1896-1897. Fortunately
+the famine of 1900 was little felt. A branch of the Indian
+Midland railway was opened throughout from Saugor to Katni
+in January 1899.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMON,<a name="ar79" id="ar79"></a></span> of Syracuse, a Pythagorean, celebrated for his
+disinterested affection for Phintias (not, as commonly given,
+Pythias), a member of the same sect. Condemned to death by
+Dionysius the Elder (or Younger) of Syracuse, Phintias begged
+to be set at liberty for a short time that he might arrange his
+affairs. Damon pledged his life for the return of his friend;
+and Phintias faithfully returned before the appointed day of
+execution. The tyrant, to express his admiration of their
+fidelity, released both the friends and begged to be admitted
+to their friendship (Diod. Sic. x. 4; Cicero, <i>De Off.</i> iii. 10).
+Hyginus (<i>Fab.</i> 257, who is followed by Schiller in his ballad,
+<i>Die Bürgschaft</i>) tells a similar story, in which the two friends
+are named Moerus and Selinuntius.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMOPHON,<a name="ar80" id="ar80"></a></span> a Greek sculptor of Messene, who executed
+many statues for the people of Messene, Megalopolis, Aegium and
+other cities of Peloponnesus. Considerable fragments, including
+three colossal heads from a group by him representing Demeter,
+Persephone, Artemis and the giant Anytus, have been discovered
+on the site of Lycosura in Arcadia, where was a temple of the
+goddess called &ldquo;The Mistress.&rdquo; They are preserved in part in
+the museum at Athens and partly on the spot. Hence there
+has arisen a great controversy as to the date of the artist, who
+has been assigned to various periods, from the 4th century B.C.
+to the 2nd A.D. A good account of the whole matter will be
+found in Frazer&rsquo;s <i>Pausanias</i>, iv. 372-379. Frazer wisely inclines
+to an early date; it is in fact difficult to find any period,
+when the cities mentioned were in a position to found temples,
+later than the time of Alexander.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMP,<a name="ar81" id="ar81"></a></span> a common Teutonic word, meaning vapour or mist
+(cf. Ger. <i>Dampf</i>, steam), and hence moisture. In its primitive
+sense the word persists in the vocabulary of coal-miners. Their
+&ldquo;firedamp&rdquo; (formerly fulminating damp) is marsh gas, which,
+when mixed with air and exploded, produced &ldquo;choke damp,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;after damp,&rdquo; or &ldquo;suffocating damp&rdquo; (carbon dioxide).
+&ldquo;Black damp&rdquo; consists of accumulations of irrespirable gases,
+mostly nitrogen, which cause the lights to burn dimly, and
+the term &ldquo;white damp&rdquo; is sometimes applied to carbon monoxide.
+As a verb, the word means to stifle or check; hence
+damped vibrations or oscillations are those which have been
+reduced or stopped, instead of being allowed to die out naturally;
+the &ldquo;dampers&rdquo; of the piano are small pieces of felt-covered
+wood which fall upon the strings and stop their vibrations
+as the keys are allowed to rise; and the &ldquo;damper&rdquo; of a
+chimney or flue, by restricting the draught, lessens the rate of
+combustion.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAMPIER, WILLIAM<a name="ar82" id="ar82"></a></span> (1652-1715), English buccaneer, navigator
+and hydrographer, was born at East Coker, Somersetshire,
+in 1652 (baptized 8th of June). Having early become an orphan,
+he was placed with the master of a ship at Weymouth, in which
+he made a voyage to Newfoundland. On his return he sailed to
+Bantam in the East Indies. He served in 1673 in the Dutch
+War under Sir Edward Sprague, and was present at two engagements
+(28th of May; 4th of June); but then fell sick and was
+put ashore. In 1674 he became an under-manager of a Jamaica
+estate, but continued only a short time in this situation. He
+afterwards engaged in the coasting trade, and thus acquired an
+accurate knowledge of all the ports and bays of the island. He
+made two voyages to the Bay of Campeachy (1675-1676), and
+remained for some time with the logwood-cutters, varying this
+occupation with buccaneering. In 1678 he returned to England,
+again visiting Jamaica in 1679 and joining a party of buccaneers,
+with whom he crossed the Isthmus of Darien, spent the year
+1680 on the Peruvian coast, and sacking, plundering and burning,
+made his way down to Juan Fernandez Island. After serving
+with another privateering expedition in the Spanish Main, he
+went to Virginia and engaged with a captain named Cook for a
+privateering voyage against the Spaniards in the South Seas.
+They sailed in August 1683, touched at the Guinea coast, and
+then proceeded round Cape Horn into the Pacific. Having
+touched at Juan Fernandez, they made the coast of South
+America, cruising along Chile and Peru. They took some prizes,
+and with these they proceeded to the Galapagos Islands and
+to Mexico, which last they fell in with near Cape Blanco.
+While they lay here Captain Cook died, and the command
+devolved on Captain Davis, who, with several other pirate
+vessels, English and French, raided the west American shores
+for the next year, attacking Guayaquil, Puebla Nova, &amp;c. At
+last Dampier, leaving Davis, went on board Swan&rsquo;s ship, and
+proceeded with him along the northern parts of Mexico as far as
+southern California. Swan then proposed, as the expedition met
+with &ldquo;bad success&rdquo; on the Mexican coast, to run across the
+Pacific and return by the East Indies. They started from Cape
+Corrientes on the 31st of March 1686, and reached Guam in the
+Ladrones on the 20th of May; the men, having almost come to
+an end of their rations, had decided to kill and eat their leaders
+next, beginning with the &ldquo;lusty and fleshy&rdquo; Swan. After six
+months&rsquo; drunkenness and debauchery in the Philippines, the
+majority of the crew, including Dampier, left Swan and thirty-six
+others behind in Mindanao, cruised (1687-1688) from Manila
+to Pulo Condore, from the latter to China, and from China to
+the Spice Islands and New Holland (the Australian mainland).
+In March 1688 they were off Sumatra, and in May off the Nicobars,
+where Dampier was marooned (at his own request, as he
+declares, for the purpose of establishing a trade in ambergris)
+with two other Englishmen, a Portuguese and some Malays.
+He and his companions contrived to navigate a canoe to Achin
+in Sumatra; but the fatigues and distress of the voyage proved
+fatal to several and nearly carried off Dampier himself. After
+making several voyages to different places of the East Indies
+(Tongking, Madras, &amp;c.), he acted for some time, and apparently
+somewhat unwillingly, as gunner to the English fort of Benkulen.
+Thence he ultimately contrived to return to England in 1691.</p>
+
+<p>In 1699 he was sent out by the English admiralty in command
+of the &ldquo;Roebuck,&rdquo; especially designed for discovery in and
+around Australia. He sailed from the Downs, the 14th of
+January, with twenty months&rsquo; provisions, touched at the
+Canaries, Cape Verdes and Bahia, and ran from Brazil round
+the Cape of Good Hope direct to Australia, whose west coast he
+reached on the 26th of July, in about 26° S. lat. Anchoring in
+Shark&rsquo;s Bay, he began a careful exploration of the neighbouring
+shore-lands, but found no good harbour or estuary, no fresh
+water or provisions. In September, accordingly, he left Australia,
+recruited and refitted at Timor, and thence made for New Guinea,
+where he arrived on the 3rd of December. By sailing along to
+its easternmost extremity, he discovered that it was terminated
+by an island, which he named New Britain (now Neu Pommern),
+whose north, south and east coasts he surveyed. That St
+George&rsquo;s Bay was really St George&rsquo;s Channel, dividing the island
+into two, was not perceived by Dampier; it was the discovery
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page791" id="page791"></a>791</span>
+of his successor, Philip Carteret. Nor did Dampier visit the
+west coast of New Britain or realize its small extent on that side.
+He was prevented from prosecuting his discoveries by the discontent
+of his men and the state of his ship. In May 1700 he was
+again at Timor, and thence he proceeded homeward by Batavia
+(4th July-17th October) and the Cape of Good Hope. In
+February 1701 he arrived off Ascension Island, when the vessel
+foundered (21st-24th February), the crew reaching land and
+staying in the island till the 3rd of April, when they were conveyed
+to England by some East Indiamen and warships bound for
+home. In 1703-1707 Dampier commanded two government
+privateers on an expedition to the South Seas with grievous
+unsuccess; better fortune attended him on his last voyage, as
+pilot to Woodes Rogers in the circumnavigation of 1708-1711.
+On the former venture Alexander Selkirk, the master of one of
+the vessels, was marooned at Juan Fernandez; on the latter
+Selkirk was rescued and a profit of nearly £200,000 was made.
+But four years before the prize-money was paid Dampier died
+(March 1715) in St Stephen&rsquo;s parish, Coleman Street, London.
+Dampier&rsquo;s accounts of his voyages are famous. He had a genius
+for observation, especially of the scientific phenomena affecting
+a seaman&rsquo;s life; his style is usually admirable&mdash;easy, clear and
+manly. His knowledge of natural history, though not scientific,
+appears surprisingly accurate and trustworthy.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Dampier&rsquo;s <i>New Voyage Round the World</i> (1697); his <i>Voyages
+and Descriptions</i> (1699), a work supplementary to the <i>New Voyage</i>;
+his <i>Voyage to New Holland in ... 1699</i> (1703, 1709); also Funnell&rsquo;s
+Narrative of the Voyage of 1703-1707; Dampier&rsquo;s <i>Vindication of
+his Voyage</i> (1707); Welbe&rsquo;s <i>Answer to Captain Dampier&rsquo;s Vindication</i>;
+Woodes Rogers, <i>Cruising Voyage Round the World</i> (1712).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(C. R. B.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAN<a name="ar83" id="ar83"></a></span> (from a Hebrew word meaning &ldquo;judge&rdquo;), a tribe of
+Israel, named after a son of Jacob and Bilhah, the maid of
+Rachel. The meaning of the name (referred to in Gen. xxx. 5 seq.,
+xlix. 16) connects Dan with Dinah (&ldquo;judgment&rdquo;), the daughter
+of Leah, whose story in Gen. xxxiv. (cf. xlix. 5 seq.) seems to
+point to an Israelite occupation of Shechem, a treacherous
+massacre of its Canaanite inhabitants by Simeon and Levi, and
+the subsequent scattering of the latter. But, historically, the
+occupation of Shechem, whether by conquest (Gen. xlviii. 22) or
+purchase (xxxiii. 19), is as obscure as the conquest of central
+Palestine itself (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Joshua</a></span>), and the true relation between Dan
+and Dinah is uncertain. The earliest seats of Dan lay at Zorah,
+Eshtaol and Kirjath-jearim, west of Jerusalem, whence they were
+forced to seek a new home, and a valuable narrative detailing
+some of the events of the move is preserved in the story of the
+sanctuary of the Ephraimite Micah (q.v.). Laish (Leshem) was
+taken with the sword and re-named Dan (see below). Here a
+sanctuary was founded under the guardianship of Jonathan,
+the grandson of Moses, which survived until the &ldquo;captivity of
+the land&rdquo; (by Tiglath-Pileser IV. in 733-732), or, according to
+another notice, until the fall of Shiloh (Judg. xviii. 30 seq.). Dan
+formed the northern limit of the land,<a name="fa1d" id="fa1d" href="#ft1d"><span class="sp">1</span></a> and with Abel (-beth-Maacah)
+was an old place renowned for Israelite lore (2 Sam.
+xx. 18; on the text see the commentaries). Little can be made
+of Dan&rsquo;s history. The reference to it as a seafaring folk (Judg.
+v. 17) is difficult, and it is uncertain whether its character as
+represented in Gen. xlix. 17, Deut. xxxiii. 22, refers to its earlier
+or later seat. The post-exilic accounts of its southern border
+would make it part of Judah, and both of them are in tradition
+the greatest of the tribes in the wanderings in the wilderness.
+Dan was subsequently either regarded as the embodiment of
+wickedness or entirely ignored; late speculation that the
+Antichrist should spring from it appears to be based upon an
+interpretation of Gen. xlix. 17 (see further R. H. Charles,
+<i>Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs</i>, pp. 128 seq.).</p>
+
+<p>A brief record of the Danite migration is found in some old
+detached fragments which K. Budde (<i>Richter und Samuel</i>)
+ingeniously arranges thus:&mdash;Judg. i. 34 (Amorite pressure);
+Josh. xix. 47<i>a</i> (see the Septuagint), 47<i>b</i>; Judg. i. 35. The position
+of Judg. xvii. seq. (after the stories of Samson) may imply that
+the Philistines, not the Amorites, caused the migration (cf.
+1 Sam. vii. 14, where the two ethnical terms interchange). The
+Mosaic priesthood and the reference to Shiloh suggest that the
+story of Eli may have belonged to this cycle of narratives; and
+the spoliation of the unknown sanctuary of the Ephraimite
+Micah and the character of the fierce Puritan tribesmen connect
+Dan with the problems of the tribes of Simeon and Levi. Dan&rsquo;s
+northern home lay near Beth-rehob, which appears to have been
+Aramean in David&rsquo;s time (2 Sam. x. 6), and it is possible that
+the migration has been antedated (cf. similarly the case of Jair,
+Num. xxxii. 41, Judg. x. 3-5). The Tyrian artificer sent to
+Solomon by Hiram was partly of Danite descent (2 Chron.
+ii. 13 seq.; but of Naphtali, so 1 Kings vii. 14); and of the two
+workers in brass who took part in the building of the tabernacle in
+the desert, one was Danite (Oholiab, Ex. xxxi. 6), while the other
+appears to have been Calebite (Bezalel, <i>ib</i>., <i>v</i>. 2; 1 Chron. ii. 20).
+The Kenites, too, have been regarded as a race of metal-workers
+(see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Cain, Kenites</a></span>), and there is evidence which would show
+that Danites, Calebites and Kenites were once closely associated
+in tradition.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See S. A. Cook, <i>Critical Notes</i>, Index, <i>s.v.</i>: E. Meyer, <i>Israeliten</i>,
+pp. 525 seq.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(S. A. C.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1d" id="ft1d" href="#fa1d"><span class="fn">1</span></a> On the late phrase &ldquo;Dan to Beersheba&rdquo; as the extreme points
+of religious life in Israel, see H. W. Hogg, <i>Expositor</i>, viii. 411-421
+(1898); and for a complete discussion of the tribe, his art. &ldquo;Dan&rdquo;
+in <i>Encyc. Bib.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAN,<a name="ar84" id="ar84"></a></span> a town of ancient Israel, near the head-waters of the
+Jordan, inhabited before its conquest by the Danites by a peaceful
+commercial population who called their city Laish or Leshem
+(Josh. xix. 47, Judg. xviii.). It appears to have been even at
+this early period a sacred city, the shrine of Micah being removed
+hither, and it was chosen by Jeroboam as the site of one of his
+calf-shrines. It makes the north limit of Palestine in the proverbial
+expression &ldquo;from Dan to Beersheba.&rdquo; The town was
+plundered by Benhadad of Damascus, and appears from that
+time to have gradually declined. Its site is sought in the mound
+called Tell-el-Kadi, &ldquo;the hill of the judge&rdquo; (Dan = &ldquo;judge&rdquo;
+in Hebrew), though weighty authorities incline to place it 4 m.
+east of this, at Banias, the old Caesarea Philippi. (See above.)</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANA, CHARLES ANDERSON<a name="ar85" id="ar85"></a></span> (1819-1897), American journalist,
+was born in Hinsdale, New Hampshire, on the 8th of
+August 1819. At the age of twelve he became a clerk in his
+uncle&rsquo;s general store at Buffalo, which failed in 1837. In 1839
+he entered Harvard, but the impairment of his eyesight in 1841
+forced him to leave college, and caused him to abandon his
+intention of entering the ministry and of studying in Germany.
+From September 1841 until March 1846 he lived at Brook Farm,
+where he was made one of the trustees of the farm, was head
+waiter when the farm became a Fourierite phalanx, and was in
+charge of the phalanstery&rsquo;s finances when its buildings were
+burned in 1846. He had previously written for (and managed)
+the <i>Harbinger</i>, the Brook Farm organ, and had written as early
+as 1844 for the Boston <i>Chronotype</i>. In 1847 he joined the staff
+of the New York <i>Tribune</i>, and in 1848 he wrote from Europe
+letters to it and other papers on the revolutionary movements
+of that year. Returning to the <i>Tribune</i> in 1849, he became its
+managing-editor, and in this capacity actively promoted the
+anti-slavery cause, seeming to shape the paper&rsquo;s policy at a time
+when Greeley was undecided and vacillating. In 1862 his
+resignation was asked for by the board of managers of the
+<i>Tribune</i>, apparently because of wide temperamental differences
+between him and Greeley. Secretary of War Stanton immediately
+made him a special investigating agent of the war department;
+in this capacity Dana discovered frauds of quartermasters
+and contractors, and as the &ldquo;eyes of the administration,&rdquo; as
+Lincoln called him, he spent much time at the front, and sent to
+Stanton frequent reports concerning the capacity and methods
+of various generals in the field; he went through the Vicksburg
+campaign and was at Chickamauga and Chattanooga, and urged
+the placing of General Grant in supreme command of all the
+armies in the field. Dana was second assistant-secretary of war
+in 1864-1865, and in 1865-1866 conducted the newly-established
+and unsuccessful Chicago <i>Republican</i>. He became the editor
+and part-owner of the New York <i>Sun</i> in 1868, and remained in
+control of it until his death at Glen Cove, Long Island, New York,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page792" id="page792"></a>792</span>
+on the 17th of October 1897. Under Dana&rsquo;s control the <i>Sun</i>
+opposed the impeachment of President Johnson; it supported
+Grant for the presidency in 1868; it was a sharp critic of Grant
+as president; and in 1872 took part in the Liberal Republican
+revolt and urged Greeley&rsquo;s nomination. It favoured Tilden,
+the Democratic candidate for the presidency, in 1876, opposed
+the Electoral Commission and continually referred to Hayes as
+the &ldquo;fraud president.&rdquo; In 1884 it supported Benjamin F.
+Butler, the candidate of Greenback-Labor and Anti-Monopolist
+parties, for the presidency, and opposed Blaine (Republican)
+and even more bitterly Cleveland (Democrat); it supported
+Cleveland and opposed Harrison in 1888, although it had bitterly
+criticized Cleveland&rsquo;s first administration, and was to criticize
+nearly every detail of his second, with the exception of Federal
+interference in the Pullman strike of 1894; and in 1896, on
+the free-silver issue, it opposed Bryan, the Democratic candidate
+for the presidency. Dana&rsquo;s literary style came to be the style
+of the <i>Sun</i>&mdash;simple, strong, clear, &ldquo;boiled down.&rdquo; <i>The Art of
+Newspaper Making</i>, containing three lectures which he wrote
+on journalism, was published in 1900. With George Ripley
+he edited <i>The New American Cyclopaedia</i> (15 vols., 1857-1863),
+reissued as the <i>American Cyclopaedia</i> in 1873-1876. He had
+excellent taste in the fine arts and edited an anthology, <i>The
+Household Book of Poetry</i> (1857). He was a very good linguist,
+published several versions from the German, and read the
+Romance and Scandinavian languages; he was an art connoisseur
+and left a remarkable collection of Chinese porcelain.
+Dana&rsquo;s <i>Reminiscences of the Civil War</i> was published in 1898,
+as was his <i>Eastern Journeys, Notes of Travel</i>. He also edited a
+campaign <i>Life of U. S. Grant</i>, published over his name and that
+of General James H. Wilson in 1868.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See James Wilson, <i>The Life of Charles A. Dana</i> (New York, 1907).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANA, FRANCIS<a name="ar86" id="ar86"></a></span> (1743-1811), American jurist, was born in
+Charlestown, Massachusetts, on the 13th of June 1743. He was
+the son of Richard Dana (1699-1772), a leader of the Massachusetts
+provincial bar, and a vigorous advocate of colonial rights
+in the pre-revolutionary period. Francis Dana graduated at
+Harvard in 1762, was admitted to the bar in 1767, and, being
+an opponent of the British colonial policy, became a leader of
+the Sons of Liberty, and in 1774 was a member of the first provincial
+congress of Massachusetts. During a two years&rsquo; visit to
+England he sought earnestly to gain friends to his colony&rsquo;s cause,
+but returned to Boston in April 1776 convinced that a friendly
+settlement of the dispute was impossible. He was a member of
+the Massachusetts executive council from 1776 to 1780, and a
+delegate to the Continental Congress from 1776 to 1778. As a
+member of the latter body he became chairman in January 1778
+of the committee appointed to visit Washington at Valley Forge,
+and confer with him concerning the reorganization of the army.
+This committee spent about three months in camp, and assisted
+Washington in preparing the plan of reorganization which Congress
+in the main adopted. In this year he was also a member
+of a committee to consider Lord North&rsquo;s offer of conciliation,
+which he vigorously opposed. In the autumn of 1779 he was
+appointed secretary to John Adams, who had been selected
+as minister plenipotentiary to negotiate treaties of peace and
+commerce with Great Britain, and in December 1780 he was
+appointed diplomatic representative to the Russian government.
+He remained at St Petersburg from 1781 to 1783, but was never
+formally received by the empress Catherine. In February 1784
+he was again chosen a delegate to Congress, and in January 1785
+he became a justice of the Massachusetts supreme court. He
+was chief justice of this court from 1791 to 1806, and presided
+with ability and rare distinction. He was an earnest advocate
+of the adoption of the Federal constitution, was a member of the
+Massachusetts convention which ratified that instrument, and
+was one of the most influential advisers of the leaders of the
+Federalist party. His tastes were scholarly, and he was one of
+the founders of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
+He died at Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the 25th of April 1811.</p>
+
+<p>His son, <span class="sc">Richard Henry Dana</span> (1787-1879), was born in
+Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the 15th of November 1787. He
+was educated at Harvard in the class of 1808. Subsequently he
+studied law and in 1811 was admitted to practice. But all other
+interests were early subordinated to his love of literature, to
+which the greater part of his long life was devoted. He became
+in 1814 a member of a literary society in Cambridge, known as
+the Anthology Club. This club began the publication of a
+monthly magazine, <i>The Monthly Anthology</i>, which gave way in
+1815 to <i>The North American Review</i>. In the editorial control of
+this periodical he was associated with Jared Sparks and Edward
+T. Channing (1790-1856) until 1821, contributing essays and
+criticisms which attracted wide attention. In 1821-1822 he
+edited in New York a short-lived literary magazine, <i>The Idle
+Man</i>. He published his first volume of <i>Poems</i> in 1827, and in
+1833 appeared his <i>Poems and Prose Writings</i>, republished in
+1850 in two volumes, in which were included practically all of
+his poems and of his prose contributions to periodical literature.
+Although the bulk of his published writings was not large, his
+influence on American literature during the first half of the
+19th century was surpassed by that of few of his contemporaries.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Richard Henry Dana</span> (1815-1882), son of the last-mentioned,
+was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the 1st of August 1815.
+He entered Harvard in the class of 1835, but at the beginning of
+his junior year an illness affecting his sight necessitated a suspension
+of his college work, and in August 1834 he shipped before
+the mast for California, returning in September 1836. The
+rough experience of this voyage did more than endow him with
+renewed health; it changed him from a dreamy, sensitive boy,
+hereditarily disinclined to any sort of active career, into a self-reliant,
+energetic man, with broad interests and keen sympathies.
+He re-entered Harvard in December 1836 and graduated in June
+1837. He was a student at the Harvard law school from 1837
+to 1840, and from January 1839 to February 1840 he was also an
+instructor in elocution in the college. In 1840 the notes of his
+sea-trip were published under the title <i>Two Years Before the Mast</i>.
+The book attained an almost unprecedented popularity both in
+America and in Europe, where it was translated into several
+languages; and it came to be considered a classic. Immediately
+after the appearance of this book Dana began the practice of law,
+which brought him a large number of maritime cases. In 1841 he
+published <i>The Seaman&rsquo;s Friend</i>, republished in England as <i>The
+Seaman&rsquo;s Manual</i>, which was long the highest authority on the
+legal rights and duties of seamen. After gaining recognition as
+one of the most prominent members of the Suffolk bar, he became
+associated in 1848 with the Free Soil movement, and took a
+prominent part in the Buffalo convention of that year. This
+step, which caused him to be ostracized for a time from the
+Boston circles in which he had been reared, brought him the
+cases of the fugitive slaves, Shadrach, Sims and Burns, and of the
+rescuers of Shadrach. On the night following the surrender of
+Burns (May 1854) Dana was brutally assaulted on the Boston
+streets. In 1853 he took a prominent part in the state constitutional
+convention. He allied himself with the Republican party
+on its organization, but his inborn dislike for political man&oelig;uvring
+prevented his ever becoming prominent in its councils.
+In 1857 he became a regular attendant at the meetings of the
+famous Boston Saturday Club, to the members of which he
+dedicated his account of a vacation trip, <i>To Cuba and Back</i>
+(1857). He returned to America from a trip round the world in
+time to participate in the presidential campaign of 1860, and
+after Lincoln&rsquo;s inauguration he was appointed United States
+district attorney for Massachusetts. In this office in 1863 he
+won before the Supreme Court of the United States the famous
+prize case of the &ldquo;Amy Warwick,&rdquo; on the decision in which
+depended the right of the government to blockade the Confederate
+ports, without giving the Confederate States an international
+status as belligerents. He brought out in 1865 an edition
+of <i>Wheaton&rsquo;s International Law</i>, his notes constituting a most
+learned and valuable authority on international law and its
+bearings on American history and diplomacy; but immediately
+after its publication Dana was charged by the editor of two
+earlier editions, William Beach Lawrence, with infringing his
+copyright, and was involved in litigation which was continued
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page793" id="page793"></a>793</span>
+for thirteen years. In such minor matters as arrangement of
+notes and verification of citations the court found against Dana,
+but in the main Dana&rsquo;s notes were vastly different from
+Lawrence&rsquo;s. In 1865 Dana declined an appointment as a
+United States district judge. During the Reconstruction period
+he favoured the congressional plan rather than that of President
+Johnson, and on this account resigned the district-attorneyship.
+In 1867-1868 he was a member of the Massachusetts House of
+Representatives, and in 1867 was retained with William M.
+Evarts to prosecute Jefferson Davis, whose admission to bail he
+counselled. In 1877 he was one of the counsel for the United
+States before the commission which in accordance with the treaty
+of Washington met at Halifax, N.S., to arbitrate the fisheries
+question between the United States and Great Britain. In
+1878 he gave up his law practice and devoted the rest of his life
+to study and travel. He died in Rome, Italy, on the 9th of
+January 1882.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Charles Francis Adams, <i>Richard Henry Dana: a Biography</i>
+(2 vols., Boston, Mass., 1891).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANA, JAMES DWIGHT<a name="ar87" id="ar87"></a></span> (1813-1895), American geologist,
+mineralogist and zoologist, was born in Utica, New York, on
+the 12th of February 1813. He early displayed a taste for science,
+which had been fostered by Fay Edgerton, a teacher in the Utica
+high school, and in 1830 he entered Yale College, in order to
+study under Benjamin Silliman the elder. Graduating in 1833,
+for the next two years he was teacher of mathematics to midshipmen
+in the navy, and sailed to the Mediterranean while engaged
+in his duties. In 1836-1837 he was assistant to Professor Silliman
+in the chemical laboratory at Yale, and then, for four years, acted
+as mineralogist and geologist of a United States exploring expedition,
+commanded by Captain Charles Wilkes, in the Pacific
+ocean (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Wilkes, Charles</a></span>). His labours in preparing the
+reports of his explorations occupied parts of thirteen years after
+his return to America in 1842. In 1844 he again became a resident
+of New Haven, married the daughter of Professor Silliman,
+and in 1850, on the resignation of the latter, was appointed
+Silliman Professor of Natural History and Geology in Yale
+College, a position which he held till 1892. In 1846 he became
+joint editor and during the later years of his life he was chief
+editor of the <i>American Journal of Science and Arts</i> (founded
+in 1818 by Benjamin Silliman), to which he was a constant
+contributor, principally of articles on geology and mineralogy.
+A bibliographical list of his writings shows 214 titles of books
+and papers, beginning in 1835 with a paper on the conditions
+of Vesuvius in 1834, and ending with the fourth revised edition
+(finished in February 1895) of his <i>Manual of Geology</i>. His
+reports on <i>Zoophytes</i>, on the <i>Geology of the Pacific Area</i>, and on
+<i>Crustacea</i>, summarizing his work on the Wilkes expedition,
+appeared in 1846, 1849 and 1852-1854, in quarto volumes, with
+copiously illustrated atlases; but as these were issued in small
+numbers, his reputation more largely rests upon his <i>System of
+Mineralogy</i> (1837 and many later editions in 1892); <i>Manual
+of Geology</i> (1862; ed. 4, 1895); <i>Manual of Mineralogy</i> (1848),
+afterwards entitled <i>Manual of Mineralogy and Lithology</i> (ed. 4,
+1887); and Corals and Coral Islands (1872; ed. 2, 1890). In
+1887 Dana revisited the Hawaiian Islands, and the results of his
+further investigations were published in a quarto volume in 1890,
+entitled <i>Characteristics of Volcanoes</i>. By the Royal Society of
+London he was awarded the Copley medal in 1877; and by
+the Geological Society the Wollaston medal in 1874. His powers
+of work were extraordinary, and in his 82nd year he was occupied
+in preparing a new edition of his <i>Manual of Geology</i>, the 4th
+edition being issued in 1895. He died on the 14th of April 1895.</p>
+
+<p>His son <span class="sc">Edward Salisbury Dana</span>, born at New Haven on
+the 16th of November 1849, is author of <i>A Textbook of Mineralogy</i>
+(1877; new ed. 1898) and a <i>Text Book of Elementary Mechanics</i>
+(1881). In 1879-80 he was professor of natural philosophy and
+then became professor of physics at Yale.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>Life of J. D. Dana</i>, by Daniel C. Gilman (1899).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANAE,<a name="ar88" id="ar88"></a></span> in Greek legend, daughter of Acrisius, king of Argos.
+Her father, having been warned by an oracle that she would bear
+a son by whom he would be slain, confined Danae in a brazen
+tower. But Zeus descended to her in a shower of gold, and she
+gave birth to Perseus, whereupon Acrisius placed her and her
+infant in a wooden box and threw them into the sea. They were
+finally driven ashore on the island of Seriphus, where they were
+picked up by a fisherman named Dictys. His brother Polydectes,
+who was king of the island, fell in love with Danae and married
+her. According to another story, her son Perseus, on his return
+with the head of Medusa, finding his mother persecuted by
+Polydectes, turned him into stone, and took Danae back with him
+to Argos. Latin legend represented her as landing on the coast
+of Latium and marrying Pilumnus or Picumnus, from whom
+Turnus, king of the Rutulians, was descended. Danae formed
+the subject of tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides,
+Livius Andronicus and Naevius. She is the personification of
+the earth suffering from drought, on which the fertilizing rain
+descends from heaven.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Apollodorus ii. 4; Sophocles, <i>Antigone</i>, 944; Horace, <i>Odes</i>, iii.
+16; Virgil, <i>Aeneid</i>, vii. 410. See also P. Schwarz, <i>De Fabula
+Danaeia</i> (1881).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANAO,<a name="ar89" id="ar89"></a></span> a town of the province of Cebú, island of Cebú,
+Philippine Islands, on the E. coast, at the mouth of the Danao
+river, 17 m. N.N.E. of Cebú, the capital. Pop. (1903) 16,173.
+Danao has a comparatively cool and healthy climate, is the
+centre of a rich agricultural region producing rice, Indian corn,
+sugar, copra and cacao, and coal is mined in the vicinity. The
+language is Cebú-Visayan.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANAUS,<a name="ar90" id="ar90"></a></span> in Greek legend, son of Belus, king of Egypt, and
+twin-brother of Aegyptus. He was born at Chemmis (Panopolis)
+in Egypt, but having been driven out by his brother he fled with his
+fifty daughters to Argos, the home of his ancestress Io. Here he
+became king and taught the inhabitants of the country to dig
+wells. In the meantime the fifty sons of Aegyptus arrived in
+Argos, and Danaus was obliged to consent to their marriage
+with his daughters. But to each of these he gave a knife with
+injunctions to slay her husband on the marriage night. They all
+obeyed except Hyperm(n)estra, who spared Lynceus. She was
+brought to trial by her father, acquitted and afterwards married
+to her lover. Being unable to find suitors for the other daughters,
+Danaus offered them in marriage to the youths of the district
+who proved themselves victorious in racing contests (Pindar,
+<i>Pythia</i>, ix. 117). According to another story, Lynceus slew
+Danaus and his daughters and seized the throne of Argos (schol.
+on Euripides, <i>Hecuba</i>, 886). By way of expiation for their crime
+the Danaïdes were condemned to the endless task of filling with
+water a vessel which had no bottom. This punishment, originally
+inflicted on those who neglected certain mystic rites, was transferred
+to those who, like the Danaïdes, despised the mystic rite
+of marriage; cf. the water-bearing figure (<span class="grk" title="loutrophoros">&#955;&#959;&#965;&#964;&#961;&#959;&#966;&#972;&#961;&#959;&#962;</span>) on the
+grave of unmarried persons. The murder of the sons of Aegyptus
+by their wives is supposed to represent the drying up of the rivers
+and springs of Argolis in summer by the agency of the nymphs.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Apollodorus ii. 1; Horace, <i>Odes</i>, iii. 11; O. Waser, in <i>Archiv für
+Religionswissenschaft</i>, ii. Heft 1, 1899; articles in Pauly-Wissowa&rsquo;s
+<i>Realencyclopädie</i> and W. H. Roscher&rsquo;s <i>Lexikon der Mythologie</i>;
+Campbell Bonner, in <i>Harvard Studies</i>, xiii. (1902).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANBURITE,<a name="ar91" id="ar91"></a></span> a rare mineral species consisting of calcium
+and boron orthosilicate, CaB<span class="su">2</span>(SiO<span class="su">4</span>)<span class="su">2</span>, crystallizing in the orthorhombic
+system. It was discovered by C.U. Shepard in 1839
+at Danbury, Connecticut, U.S.A., and named by him after this
+locality. The crystals are prismatic in habit, and closely resemble
+topaz in form and interfacial angles. There is an imperfect
+cleavage parallel to the basal plane. Crystals are
+transparent to translucent, and colourless to pale yellow;
+hardness 7; specific gravity 3.0. At Danbury the mineral occurs
+with microcline and oligoclase embedded in dolomite. Large
+crystals, reaching 4 in. in length, have been found with calcite in
+veins traversing granite at Russell in St Lawrence county, New
+York. Smaller but well-developed crystals have been found on
+gneiss at Mt. Scopi and Petersthal (the valley of the Vals Rhine)
+in Switzerland. Splendid crystals have recently been obtained
+from Japan.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANBURY,<a name="ar92" id="ar92"></a></span> a city and one of the county-seats of Fairfield
+county, Connecticut, U.S.A., in Danbury township, in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page794" id="page794"></a>794</span>
+south-west part of the state, on the Still river, a tributary of the
+Housatonic. Pop. (1890) 16,552; (1900) 16,537 (3702 foreign-born);
+(1910) 20,234. In 1900 the population of the township, including
+that of the city, was 19,474, and in 1910, 23,502. Danbury
+is served by three divisions of the New York, New Haven &amp;
+Hartford railway; by the Danbury &amp; Harlem electric railway,
+which connects at Goldens Bridge, New York, with the Harlem
+division of the New York Central; and by an electric line to
+Bethel, Connecticut. Lake Kenosia, about 2½ m. from the centre
+of the city, is a pleasure resort. A state normal school was
+opened in Danbury in 1904, and there is a home for destitute
+and homeless children under private (unsectarian) control.
+The city has good water-power, and the municipality owns the
+water works. The principal industry is the manufacture of felt
+hats, begun in 1780, and in 1905 engaging about thirty factories,
+with a product for the year valued at $5,798,107 (71.9% of the
+value of all the factory products of the city, and 15.8% of the
+value of all the felt hats produced in the United States). The
+city ranked first among the cities of the country in this industry
+in 1900 and second in 1905, and in 1905 no other city showed so
+high a degree of specialization in it. Silver-plated ware (mostly
+manufactured by Rogers Bros.) is another important product.
+At Danbury is held annually the well-known agricultural
+Danbury Fair. The township was settled in 1684 by emigrants
+from Norwalk, and received its present name in 1687. When
+the War of Independence opened, Enoch Crosby, believed to be
+the original of Harvey Birch, the hero of J. F. Cooper&rsquo;s <i>The Spy</i>,
+was a resident of Danbury. A depot of military supplies was
+established in the village of Danbury in 1776; in April 1777
+Governor William Tryon, of New York, raided the place, destroying
+the military stores and considerable private property.
+During his retreat he was attacked (April 26th) at Ridgefield
+(about 9 m. south by east of Danbury) by the Americans under
+General David Wooster (1710-1777), who was fatally wounded
+in the conflict (being succeeded by General Benedict Arnold),
+and to whose memory a monument was erected in Danbury in
+1854. Danbury was chartered as a borough in 1832 and as a
+city in 1880. In 1870 the <i>Danbury News</i> was established by the
+consolidation of the <i>Jeffersonian</i> and the <i>Times</i>, by James
+Montgomery Bailey (1841-1894), from 1865 to 1870 proprietor
+of the <i>Times</i>. He wrote for the <i>News</i> humorous sketches,
+which made him and the paper famous, Bailey being known as
+the &ldquo;Danbury News Man&rdquo;; among his books are <i>Life in Danbury</i>
+(1873), <i>The Danbury News Man&rsquo;s Almanac</i> (1873), <i>They
+All Do It</i> (1877), <i>England from a Back Window</i> (1878), <i>Mr
+Philip&rsquo;s Goneness</i> (1879), <i>The Danbury Boom</i> (1880), and <i>History
+of Danbury</i> (1896).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANBY, FRANCIS<a name="ar93" id="ar93"></a></span> (1793-1861), English painter, was born in
+the south of Ireland on the 16th of November 1793. His father
+farmed a small property he owned near Wexford, but his death
+caused the family to remove to Dublin, while Francis was still a
+schoolboy. He began to practice drawing at the Royal Dublin
+Society&rsquo;s schools; and under an erratic young artist named
+O&rsquo;Connor he began painting landscape. Danby also made
+acquaintance with George Petrie, and all three left for London
+together in 1813. This expedition, undertaken with very inadequate
+funds, quickly came to an end, and they had to get
+home again by walking. At Bristol they made a pause, and
+Danby, finding he could get trifling sums for water-colour
+drawings, remained there working diligently and sending to the
+London exhibitions pictures of importance. There his large
+pictures in oil quickly attracted attention. &ldquo;The Upas Tree&rdquo;
+(1820) and &ldquo;The Delivery of the Israelites&rdquo; (1825) brought
+him his election as an associate of the Royal Academy. He left
+Bristol for London, and in 1828 exhibited his &ldquo;Opening of the
+Sixth Seal&rdquo; at the British Institution, receiving from that body
+a prize of 200 guineas; and this picture was followed by two
+others from the Apocalypse. He suddenly left London, declaring
+that he would never live there again, and that the Academy,
+instead of aiding him, had, somehow or other, used him badly.
+Some insurmountable domestic difficulty overtook him also, and
+for eleven or twelve years he lived on the Lake of Geneva, a
+Bohemian with boat-building fancies, painting only now and
+then. He returned to England in 1841, when his sons, James
+and Thomas, both artists, were growing up. Other pictures by
+him were &ldquo;The Golden Age&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Evening Gun,&rdquo; the
+first begun before he left England, the second painted after his
+return; he had taken up his abode at Exmouth, where he died
+on the 9th of February 1861.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANCE,<a name="ar94" id="ar94"></a></span> the name of an English family distinguished in
+architecture, art and the drama. <span class="sc">George Dance</span>, the elder
+(1700-1768), obtained the appointment of architect to the city
+of London, and designed the Mansion House (1739); the churches
+of St Botolph, Aldgate (1741), St Luke&rsquo;s, Old Street; St
+Leonard, Shoreditch; the old excise office; Broad Street; and
+other public works of importance. He died on the 8th of
+February 1768. His eldest son, <span class="sc">James Dance</span> (1722-1744), was
+born on the 17th of March 1722, and educated at the Merchant
+Taylors&rsquo; School and St John&rsquo;s College, Oxford, which he left
+before graduating. He took the name of Love, and became an
+actor and playwright of no great merit. In the former capacity
+he was for twelve years connected with Drury Lane theatre.
+He wrote &ldquo;an heroic poem&rdquo; on <i>Cricket</i>, about 1740, and a volume
+of <i>Poems on Several Occasions</i> (1754), and a number of comedies&mdash;the
+earliest <i>Pamela</i> (1742).</p>
+
+<p>George Dance&rsquo;s third son, Sir <span class="sc">Nathaniel Dance-Holland</span>,
+Bart. (1735-1811), was born on the 18th of May 1735, and
+studied art under Francis Hayman, and in Italy, where he met
+Angelica Kauffmann, to whom he was devotedly and hopelessly
+attached. From Rome he sent home &ldquo;Dido and Aeneas&rdquo;
+(1763), and he continued to paint occasional historical pictures
+of the same quasi-classic kind throughout his career. On his
+return to England he took up portrait-painting with great
+success, and contributed to the first exhibition of the Royal
+Academy, of which he was a foundation member, full-length
+portraits of George III. and his queen. These, and his portraits
+of Captain Cook and of Garrick as Richard III., engraved by
+Dixon, are his best-known works. Himself a rich man, in 1790
+he married a widow with £15,000 a year, dropped his profession,
+and became M.P. for East Grinstead, taking the additional name
+of Holland. He was made a baronet in 1800. He died on the
+15th of October 1811, leaving a fortune of £200,000.</p>
+
+<p>George Dance&rsquo;s fifth and youngest son, <span class="sc">George Dance</span>, the
+younger (1741-1825), succeeded his father as city surveyor and
+architect in 1768. He was then only twenty-seven, had spent
+several years abroad, chiefly in Italy with his brother Nathaniel,
+and had already distinguished himself by designs for Blackfriars
+Bridge sent to the 1761 exhibition of the Incorporated Society of
+Artists. His first important public work was the rebuilding
+of Newgate prison in 1770. The front of the Guildhall was also
+his. He, too, was a foundation member of the Royal Academy,
+and for a number of years the last survivor of the forty original
+academicians. His last years were devoted to art rather than to
+architecture, and after 1798 his Academy contributions consisted
+solely of chalk portraits of his friends, seventy-two of which were
+engraved and published (1808-1814). He resigned his office in
+1815, and after many years of illness died on the 14th of January
+1825, and was buried in St Paul&rsquo;s. His son, <span class="sc">Charles Dance</span>
+(1794-1863), was for thirty years registrar, taxing officer and
+chief clerk of the insolvent debtors&rsquo; court, retiring, when it was
+abolished, on an allowance. In collaboration with J. R. Planché
+and others, or alone, he wrote a great number of extravaganzas,
+farces and comediettas. He was one of the first, if not the first,
+of the burlesque writers, and was the author of those produced
+so successfully by Madame Vestris for years at the Olympic.
+Of his farces, <i>Delicate Ground, Who Speaks First?</i>, <i>A Morning
+Call</i> and others are still occasionally revived. He died on the
+6th of January 1863.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANCE<a name="ar95" id="ar95"></a></span> (Fr. <i>danse</i>; of obscure origin, connected with Old
+High Ger. <i>danson</i>, to stretch). The term &ldquo;dancing&rdquo; in its
+widest sense includes three things:&mdash;(1) the spontaneous activity
+of the muscles under the influence of some strong emotion, such
+as social joy or religious exultation; (2) definite combinations of
+graceful movements performed for the sake of the pleasure
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page795" id="page795"></a>795</span>
+which the exercise affords to the dancer or to the spectator;
+(3) carefully trained movements which are meant by the dancer
+vividly to represent the actions and passions of other people.
+In the highest sense it seems to be for prose-gesture what song
+is for the instinctive exclamations of feeling. Regarded as the
+outlet or expression of strong feeling, dancing does not require
+much discussion, for the general rule applies that such demonstrations
+for a time at least sustain and do not exhaust the flow
+of feeling. The voice and the facial muscles and many of the
+organs are affected at the same time, and the result is a high state
+of vitality which among the spinning Dervishes or in the ecstatic
+worship of Bacchus and Cybele amounted to something like
+madness. Even here there is traceable an undulatory movement
+which, as Herbert Spencer says, is &ldquo;habitually generated by
+feeling in its bodily discharge.&rdquo; But it is only in the advanced
+or volitional stage of dancing that we find developed the essential
+feature of <i>measure</i>, which has been said to consist in &ldquo;the alternation
+of stronger muscular contractions with weaker ones,&rdquo; an
+alternation which, except in the cases of savages and children,
+&ldquo;is compounded with longer rises and falls in the degree of
+muscular excitement.&rdquo; In analysing the state of mind which
+this measured dancing produces, we must first of all allow for
+the pleasant glow of excitement caused by the excess of blood
+sent to the brain. But apart from this, there is an agreeable
+sense of uniformity in the succession of muscular efforts, and in
+the spaces described, and also in the period of their recurrence.
+If the steps of dancing and the intervals of time be not precisely
+equal, there is still a pleasure depending on the gradually increasing
+intensity of motion, on the undulation which uniformly
+rises in order to fall. As Florizel says to Perdita, &ldquo;When you do
+dance, I wish you a wave of the sea&rdquo; (<i>Winter&rsquo;s Tale</i>, iv. 3).
+The mind feels the beauty of emphasis and cadence in muscular
+motion, just as much as in musical notes. Then, the figure of
+the dance is frequently a circle or some more graceful curve or
+series of curves,&mdash;a fact which satisfies the dancer as well as the
+eye of the spectator. But all such effects are intensified by the
+use of music, which not only brings a perfectly distinct set of
+pleasurable sensations to dancer and spectator, but by the control
+of dancing produces an inexpressibly sweet harmony of sound
+and motion. This harmony is further enriched if there be two
+dancing together on one plan, or a large company of dancers
+executing certain evolutions, the success of which depends on
+the separate harmonies of all the couples. The fundamental
+condition is that throughout the dance all the dancers keep
+within their bases of gravity. This is not only required for the
+dancers&rsquo; own enjoyment, but, as in the famous Mercury on
+tiptoe, it is essential to the beautiful effect for the spectator.
+The idea of much being safely supported by little is what proves
+attractive in the posturing ballet. But this is merely one condition
+of graceful dancing, and if it be made the chief object the
+dancer sinks into the acrobat.</p>
+
+<p>Dancing is, in fact, the universal human expression, by
+movements of the limbs and body, of a sense of rhythm which
+is implanted among the primitive instincts of the animal world.
+The rhythmic principle of motion extends throughout the universe,
+governing the lapse of waves, the flow of tides, the reverberations
+of light and sound, and the movements of celestial
+bodies; and in the human organism it manifests itself in the
+automatic pulses and flexions of the blood and tissues. Dancing
+is merely the voluntary application of the rhythmic principle,
+when excitement has induced an abnormally rapid oxidization
+of brain tissue, to the physical exertion by which the overcharged
+brain is relieved. This is primitive dancing; and it
+embraces all movements of the limbs and body expressive of
+joy or grief, all pantomimic representations of incidents in the
+lives of the dancers, all performances in which movements of
+the body are employed to excite the passions of hatred or love,
+pity or revenge, or to arouse the warlike instincts, and all ceremonies
+in which such movements express homage or worship,
+or are used as religious exercises. Although music is not an
+essential part of dancing, it almost invariably accompanies it,
+even in the crudest form of a rhythm beaten out on a drum.</p>
+
+<p><i>Primitive and Ancient Dancing.</i>&mdash;In Tigrè the Abyssinians
+dance the <i>chassée</i> step in a circle, and keep time by shrugging
+their shoulders and working their elbows backwards and forwards.
+At intervals the dancers squat on the ground, still
+moving the arms and shoulders in the same way. The Bushmen
+dance in their low-roofed rooms supporting themselves by
+sticks; one foot remains motionless, the other dances in a wild
+irregular manner, while the hands are occupied with the sticks.
+The Gonds, a hill-tribe of Hindustan, dance generally in pairs,
+with a shuffling step, the eyes on the ground, the arms close to
+the body, and the elbows at an angle with the closed hand.
+Advancing to a point, the dancer suddenly erects his head, and
+wheels round to the starting point. The women of the Pultooah
+tribe dance in a circle, moving backwards and forwards in a bent
+posture. The Santal women, again, are slow and graceful in
+dance; joining hands, they form themselves into the arc of a
+circle, towards the centre of which they advance and then retire,
+moving at the same time slightly towards the right, so as to
+complete the circle in an hour. The Kukis of Assam have only
+the rudest possible step, an awkward hop with the knees very
+much bent. The national dance of the Kamchadale is one of
+the most violent known, every muscle apparently quivering at
+every movement. But there, and in some other cases where
+men and women dance together, there is a trace of deliberate
+obscenity; the dance is, in fact, a rude representation of sexual
+passion. It has been said that some of the Tasmanian <i>corrobories</i>
+have a phallic design. The Yucatan dance of <i>naual</i> may also
+be mentioned. The Andamans hop on one foot and swing the
+arms violently backwards and forwards. The Veddahs jump
+with both feet together, patting their bodies, or clapping their
+hands, and make a point of bringing their long hair down in
+front of the face. In New Caledonia the dance consists of a series
+of twistings of the body, the feet being lifted alternately, but
+without change of place. The Fijians jump half round from side
+to side with their arms akimbo. The only modulation of the
+Samoan dance is one of time&mdash;a <i>crescendo</i> movement, which is
+well-known in the modern ball-room. The Javans are perhaps
+unique in their distinct and graceful gestures of the hands and
+fingers. At a Mexican feast called Huitzilopochtli, the noblemen
+and women danced tied together at the hands, and embracing
+one another, the arms being thrown over the neck. This resembles
+the dance variously known as the Greek Bracelet or
+Brawl, <span class="grk" title="Hormos">&#8013;&#961;&#956;&#959;&#962;</span>, or Bearsfeet; but all of them<a name="fa1e" id="fa1e" href="#ft1e"><span class="sp">1</span></a> probably are to a
+certain extent symbolical of the relations between the sexes.
+Actual contact of the partners, however, is quite intelligible as
+matter of pure dancing; for, apart altogether from the pleasure
+of the embrace, the harmony of the double rotation adds very
+much to the enjoyment. In a very old Peruvian dance of
+ceremony before the Inca, several hundreds of men formed a
+chain, each taking hold of the hand of the man beyond his
+immediate neighbour, and the whole body moving forwards and
+backwards three steps at a time as they approached the throne.
+In this, as in the national dance of the Coles of Lower Bengal,
+there was perhaps a suggestion of &ldquo;l&rsquo;union fait la force.&rdquo; In
+Yucatan stilts were occasionally used for dancing.</p>
+
+<p>It seldom happens that dancing takes place without accompaniment,
+either by the dancers or by others. This is not merely
+because the feelings which find relief in dancing express themselves
+at the same time in other forms; in some cases, indeed,
+the vocal and instrumental elements largely predominate, and
+form the ground-work of the whole emotional demonstration.
+Whether they do so or not will of course depend on the intellectual
+advancement of the nation or tribe and upon the particular
+development of their aesthetical sensibility. A striking instance
+occurs among the Zulus, whose grand dances are merely the
+accompaniment to the colloquial war and hunting songs, in
+which the women put questions which are answered by the men.
+So also in Tahiti there is a set of national ballads and songs,
+referring to many events in the past and present lives of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page796" id="page796"></a>796</span>
+people. The fisherman, the woodsman, the canoe-builder, has
+each his trade song, which on public occasions at least is illustrated
+by dancing. But the accompaniment is often consciously
+intended, by an appeal to the ear, to regulate and sustain the
+excitement of the muscles. And a close relation will be found
+always to exist between the excellence of a nation&rsquo;s dancing
+and the excellence or complexity of its music and poetry. In
+some cases the performer himself sings or marks time by the
+clanking of ornaments on his person. In others the accompaniment
+consists sometimes of a rude chant improvised by those
+standing round, or of music from instruments, or of mere clapping
+of the hands, or of striking one stick against another or on the
+ground, or of &ldquo;marking time,&rdquo; in the technical sense. The
+Tasmanians beat on a rolled-up kangaroo-skin. The Kamchadales
+make a noise like a continuous hiccough all through the
+dance. The Andamans use a large hollow dancing-board, on
+which one man is set apart to stamp. Sometimes it is the
+privilege of the tribal chief to sing the accompaniment while his
+people dance. The savages of New Caledonia whistle and strike
+upon the hip.</p>
+
+<p>The rude imitative dances of early civilization are of extreme
+interest. In the same way the dances of the Ostyak tribes
+(Northern Asiatic) imitate the habitual sports of the chase and
+the gambols of the wolf and the bear and other wild beasts, the
+dancing consisting mainly of sudden leaps and violent turns
+which exhaust the muscular powers of the whole body. The
+Kamchadales, too, in dancing, imitate bears, dogs and birds.
+The <i>Kru</i> dances of the Coast Negroes represent hunting scenes;
+and on the Congo, before the hunters start, they go through a
+dance imitating the habits of the gorilla and its movements
+when attacked. The Damara dance is a mimic representation
+of the movements of oxen and sheep, four men stooping with
+their heads in contact and uttering harsh cries. The canter of
+the baboon is the humorous part of the ceremony. The Bushmen
+dance in long irregular jumps, which they compare to the leaping
+of a herd of calves, and the Hottentots not only go on all-fours
+to counterfeit the baboon, but they have a dance in which the
+buzzing of a swarm of bees is represented. The Kennowits in
+Borneo introduce the mias and the deer for the same purpose.
+The Australians and Tasmanians in their dances called <i>corrobories</i>
+imitate the frog and the kangaroo (both leaping animals). The
+hunt of the emu is also performed, a number of men passing
+slowly round the fire and throwing their arrows about so as
+to imitate the movements of the animal&rsquo;s head while feeding.
+The Gonds are fond of dancing the bison hunt, one man with
+skin and horns taking the part of the animal. Closely allied to
+these are the mimic fights, almost universal among tribes to
+which war is one of the great interests of life. The Bravery
+dance of the Dahomans and the Hoolee of the Bhil tribe in the
+Vindhya Hills are illustrations. The latter seems to have been
+reduced to an amusement conducted by professionals who go
+from village to village,&mdash;the battle being engaged in by women
+with long poles on the one side, and men with short cudgels on
+the other. There is here an element of comedy, which also
+appears in the Fiji club-dance. This, although no doubt originally
+suggested by war, is enlivened by the presence of a clown
+covered with leaves and wearing a mask. The monotonous song
+accompanying the club-dance is by way of commentary or explanation.
+So, also, in Guatemala there is a public <i>baile</i> or dance,
+in which all the performers, wearing the skins and heads of beasts,
+go through a mock battle, which always ends in the victory of
+those wearing the deer&rsquo;s head. At the end the victors trace in
+the sand with a pole the figure of some animal; and this exhibition
+is supposed to have some historical reference. But nearly
+all savage tribes have a regular war-dance, in which they appear
+in fighting costume, handle their weapons, and go through the
+movements of challenge, conflict, pursuit or defeat. The women
+generally supply the stimulus of music. There is one very
+picturesque dance of the Natal Kaffirs, which probably refers to
+the departure of the warriors for the battle. The women appeal
+plaintively to the men, who slowly withdraw, stamping on the
+ground and darting their short spears or <i>assegais</i> towards the sky.
+In Madagascar, when the men are absent on war, the women
+dance for a great part of the day, believing that this inspires
+their husbands with courage. In this, however, there may be
+some religious significance. These war-dances are totally distinct
+from the institution of military drill, which belongs to a later
+period, when social life has become less impulsive and more reflective.<a name="fa2e" id="fa2e" href="#ft2e"><span class="sp">2</span></a>
+There can be little doubt that some of the characteristic
+movements of these primitive hunting and war-dances
+survive in the smooth and ceremonious dances of the present day.
+But the early mimetic dance was not confined to these two
+subjects; it embraced the other great events of savage life&mdash;the
+drama of courtship and marriage, the funeral dance, the
+consecration of labour, the celebration of harvest or vintage;<a name="fa3e" id="fa3e" href="#ft3e"><span class="sp">3</span></a>
+sometimes, too, purely fictitious scenes of dramatic interest,
+while other dances degenerated into games. For instance, in
+Yucatan one man danced in a cowering attitude round a circle,
+while another followed, hurling at him <i>bohordos</i> or canes, which
+were adroitly caught on a small stick. Again, in Tasmania, the
+dances of the women describe their &ldquo;clamber for the opossum,
+diving for shell-fish, digging for roots, nursing children and
+quarrelling with husbands.&rdquo; Another dance, in which a woman
+by gesture taunts a chieftain with cowardice, gives him an
+opportunity of coming forward and recounting his courageous
+deeds in dance. The funeral dance of the Todas (another Indian
+hill-tribe) consists in walking backwards and forwards, without
+variation, to a howling tune of &ldquo;ha! hoo!&rdquo; The meaning of
+this is obscure, but it can scarcely be solely an outburst of grief.
+In Dahomey the blacksmiths, carpenters, hunters, braves and
+bards, with their various tools and instruments, join in a dramatic
+dance. We may add here a form of dance which is almost precisely
+equivalent to the spoken incantation. It is used by the
+professional devil-dancer of the wild Veddahs for the cure of
+diseases. An offering of eatables is put on a tripod of sticks,
+and the dancer, decorated with green leaves, goes into a paroxysm
+of dancing, in the midst of which he receives the required information.
+This, however, rather belongs to the subject of religious
+dances.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible here to enumerate either the names or the
+forms of the sacred dances which formed so prominent a part
+of the worship of antiquity. A mystic philosophy found in them
+a resemblance to the courses of the stars. This Pythagorean
+idea was expanded by Sir John Davies, in his epic poem <i>Orchestra</i>,
+published in 1596. They were probably adapted to many
+purposes,&mdash;to thanksgiving, praise, supplication and humiliation.
+It is only one striking illustration of this widespread practice,
+that there was at Rome a very ancient order of priests especially
+named Salii, who struck their shields and sang <i>assamenta</i> as
+they danced. The practice reappeared in the early church,
+special provision being made for dancing in the choir. Scaliger,
+who astonished Charles V. by his dancing powers, says the
+bishops were called <i>Praesules</i>, because they led the dance on
+feast days. According to some of the fathers, the angels are
+always dancing, and the glorious company of the apostles is
+really a <i>chorus</i> of dancers. Dancing, however, fell into discredit
+with the feast of the <i>Agapae</i>. St Augustine says, &ldquo;Melius est
+fodere quam saltare&rdquo;; and the practice was generally prohibited
+for some time. No church or sect has raged so fiercely against
+the cardinal sin of dancing as the Albigenses of Languedoc and
+the Waldenses, who agreed in calling it the devil&rsquo;s procession.
+After the middle of the 18th century there were still traces of
+religious dancing in the cathedrals of Spain, Portugal and
+Roussillon&mdash;especially in the Mozarabic Mass of Toledo. An
+account of the numerous secular dances, public and private, of
+Greece and Rome will be found in the classical histories, and in
+J. Weaver&rsquo;s <i>Essay towards a History of Dancing</i>, (London, 1712),
+which, however, must be revised by more recent authorities.
+The Pyrrhic (derived from the Memphitic) in all its local varieties,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page797" id="page797"></a>797</span>
+the Bacchanalia and the Hymenaea were among the more
+important. The name of Lycurgus is also associated with the
+Trichoria. Among the stage dances of the Athenians, which
+formed interludes to the regular drama, one of the oldest was
+the Delian dance of the Labyrinth, ascribed to Theseus, and
+called <span class="grk" title="Geranos">&#915;&#941;&#961;&#945;&#957;&#959;&#962;</span>, from its resemblance to the flight of cranes,
+and one of the most powerful was the dance of the Eumenides.
+A further development of the art took place at Rome, under
+Augustus, when Pylades and Bathyllus brought serious and comic
+pantomime to great perfection. The subjects chosen were such
+as the labours of Hercules, and the surprise of Venus and Mars by
+Vulcan. The state of public feeling on the subject is well shown
+in Lucian&rsquo;s amusing dialogue <i>De Saltatione</i>. Before this Rome
+had only very inferior buffoons, who attended dinner parties,
+and whose art traditions belonged not to Greece, but to Etruria.<a name="fa4e" id="fa4e" href="#ft4e"><span class="sp">4</span></a>
+Apparently, however, the Romans, though fond of ceremony
+and of the theatre, were by temperament not great dancers
+in private. Cicero says: &ldquo;Nemo fere saltat sobrius, nisi
+forte insanit.&rdquo; But the Italic dance of the imperial theatre,
+supported by music and splendid dresses, supplanted for a
+time the older dramas. It was the policy of Augustus to
+cultivate other than political interests for the people; and he
+passed laws for the protection and privilege of the pantomimists.
+They were freed from the <i>jus virgarum</i>, and they used their
+freedom against the peace of the city. Tiberius and Domitian
+oppressed and banished them; Trajan and Aurelius gave them
+such titles as decurions and priests of Apollo; but the pantomime
+stage soon yielded to the general corruption of the
+empire.</p>
+
+<p><i>Modern Dancing.</i>&mdash;In modern civilized countries dancing
+has developed as an art and pastime, as an entertainment. Its
+direct application to arouse emotion or religious feeling tends to
+be obscured and finally dropped out.</p>
+
+<p>Italy, in the 15th century, saw the renaissance of dancing,
+and France may be said to have been the nursery of the modern
+art, though comparatively few modern dances are really French
+in origin. The national dances of other countries were brought
+to France, studied systematically, and made perfect there.
+An English or a Bohemian dance, practised only amongst
+peasants, would be taken to France, polished and perfected,
+and would at last find its way back to its own country, no more
+recognizable than a piece of elegant cloth when it returns from
+the printer to the place from which as &ldquo;grey&rdquo; material it was
+sent. The fact that the terminology of dancing is almost entirely
+French is a sufficient indication of the origin of the rules that
+govern it. The earliest dances that bear any relation to the
+modern art are probably the <i>danses basses</i> and <i>danses hautes</i>
+of the 16th century. The <i>danse basse</i> was the dance of the
+court of Charles IX. and of good society, the steps being very
+grave and dignified, not to say solemn, and the accompaniment
+a psalm tune. The <i>danses hautes</i> or <i>baladines</i> had a skipping
+step, and were practised only by clowns and country people.
+More lively dances, such as the <i>Gaillarde</i> and <i>Volta</i>, were introduced
+into France from Italy by Catherine de&rsquo; Medici, but even
+in these the interest was chiefly spectacular. Other dances of
+the same period were the <i>Branle</i> (afterwards corrupted to <i>Braule</i>,
+and known in England as the Brawle)&mdash;a kind of generic dance
+which was capable of an almost infinite amount of variety.
+Thus there were imitative dances&mdash;<i>Branles mimés</i>, such as the
+<i>Branles des Ermites</i>, <i>Branles des flambeaux</i> and the <i>Branles des
+lavandières</i>. The <i>Branle</i> in its original form had steps like the
+<i>Allemande</i>. Perhaps the most famous and stately dance of this
+period was the <i>Pavane</i> (of Spanish origin), which is very fully
+described in Tabouret&rsquo;s <i>Orchésographie</i>, the earliest work in which
+a dance is found minutely described. The <i>Pavane</i>, which was
+really more a procession than a dance, must have been a very
+gorgeous and noble sight, and it was perfectly suited to the dress
+of the period, the stiff brocades of the ladies and the swords and
+heavily-plumed hats of the gentlemen being displayed in its
+simple and dignified measures to great advantage. The dancers
+in the time of Henry III. of France usually sang, while performing
+the <i>Pavane</i>, a <i>chanson</i>, of which this is one of the verses:</p>
+
+<table class="reg f90" summary="poem"><tr><td> <div class="poemr">
+<p>&ldquo;Approche donc, ma belle,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Approche-toi, mon bien;</p>
+ <p class="i05">Ne me sois plus rebelle,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Puisque mon c&oelig;ur est tien;</p>
+ <p class="i05">Pour mon âme apaiser,</p>
+ <p class="i05">Donne-moi un baiser.&rdquo;</p>
+</div> </td></tr></table>
+
+<p>In the <i>Pavane</i> and <i>Branle</i>, and in nearly all the dances of the
+17th and 18th centuries, the practice of kissing formed a not
+unimportant part, and seems to have added greatly to the popularity
+of the pastime. Another extremely popular dance was the
+<i>Saraband</i>, which, however, died out after the 17th century.
+It was originally a Spanish dance, but enjoyed an enormous
+success for a time in France. Every dance at that time had its
+own tune or tunes, which were called by its own name, and of
+the <i>Saraband</i> the chevalier de Grammont wrote that &ldquo;it either
+charmed or annoyed everyone, for all the guitarists of the court
+began to learn it, and God only knows the universal twanging
+that followed.&rdquo; Vauquelin des Yveteaux, in his eightieth year,
+desired to die to the tune of the <i>Saraband</i>, &ldquo;so that his soul might
+pass away sweetly.&rdquo; After the <i>Pavane</i> came the <i>Courante</i>,
+a court dance performed on tiptoe with slightly jumping steps
+and many bows and curtseys. The <i>Courante</i> is one of the most
+important of the strictly modern dances. The minuet and the
+waltz were both in some degree derived from it, and it had much
+in common with the famous <i>Seguidilla</i> of Spain. It was a
+favourite dance of Louis XIV., who was an adept in the art,
+and it was regarded in his time as of such importance that a
+nobleman&rsquo;s education could hardly have been said to be begun
+until he had mastered the <i>Courante</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The dance which the French brought to the greatest perfection&mdash;which
+many, indeed, regard as the fine flower of the art&mdash;was
+the <i>Minuet</i>. Its origin, as a rustic dance, is not less antique
+than that of the other dances from which the modern art has
+been evolved. It was originally a <i>branle</i> of Poitou, derived from
+the <i>Courante</i>. It came to Paris in 1650, and was first set to
+music by Lully. It was at first a gay and lively dance, but on
+being brought to court it soon lost its sportive character and
+became grave and dignified. It is mentioned by Beauchamps,
+the father of dancing-masters, who flourished in Louis XIV.&rsquo;s
+reign, and also by Blondy, his pupil; but it was Pécour who
+really gave the minuet its popularity, and although it was
+improved and made perfect by Dauberval, Gardel, Marcel and
+Vestris, it was in Louis XV.&rsquo;s reign that it saw its golden age.
+It was then a dance for two in moderate triple time, and was
+generally followed by the gavotte. Afterwards the minuet was
+considerably developed, and with the gavotte became chiefly a
+stage dance and a means of display; but it should be remembered
+that the minuets which are now danced on the stage are
+generally highly elaborated with a view to their spectacular effect,
+and have imported into them steps and figures which do not
+belong to the minuet at all, but are borrowed from all kinds of
+other dances. The original court minuet was a grave and simple
+dance, although it did not retain its simplicity for long. But
+when it became elaborated it was glorified and moulded into a
+perfect expression of an age in which deportment was most
+sedulously cultivated and most brilliantly polished. The &ldquo;languishing
+eye and smiling mouth&rdquo; had their due effect in the
+minuet; it was a school for chivalry, courtesy and ceremony;
+the hundred slow graceful movements and curtseys, the pauses
+which had to be filled by neatly-turned compliments, the beauty
+and bravery of attire&mdash;all were eloquent of graces and outward
+refinements which we cannot boast now. The fact that the
+measure of the minuet has become incorporated in the structure
+of the symphony shows how important was its place in the polite
+world. The <i>Gavotte</i>, which was often danced as a pendant to
+the minuet, was also originally a peasant&rsquo;s dance, a <i>danse des
+Gavots</i>, and consisted chiefly of kissing and capering. It also
+became stiff and artificial, and in the later and more prudish
+half of the 18th century the ladies received bouquets instead of
+kisses in dancing the gavotte. It rapidly became a stage dance,
+and it has never been restored to the ballroom. Grétry attempted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page798" id="page798"></a>798</span>
+to revive it, but his arrangement never became popular. Other
+dances which were naturalized in France were the <i>Écossaise</i>,
+popular in 1760; the <i>Cotillon</i>, fashionable under Charles X.,
+derived from the peasant <i>branles</i> and danced by ladies in short
+skirts; the <i>Galop</i>, imported from Germany; the <i>Lancers</i>,
+invented by Laborde in 1836; the <i>Polka</i>, brought by a dancing-master
+from Prague in 1840; the <i>Schottische</i>, also Bohemian,
+first introduced in 1844; the <i>Bourrée</i>, or French clog-dance; the
+<i>Quadrille</i>, known in the 18th century as the <i>Contre-danse</i>; and
+the <i>Waltz</i>, which was danced as a <i>volte</i> by Henry III. of France,
+but only became popular in the beginning of the 19th century.
+We shall return to the history of some of these later dances in
+discussing the dances at present in use.</p>
+
+<p>If France has been the nursery and school of the art of dancing,
+Spain is its true home. There it is part of the national life, the
+inevitable expression of the gay, contented, irresponsible, sunburnt
+nature of the people. The form of Spanish dances has
+hardly changed; some of them are of great antiquity, and may
+be traced back with hardly a break to the performances in ancient
+Rome of the famous dancing-girls of Cadiz. The connexion is
+lost during the period of the Arab invasion, but the art was not
+neglected, and Jovellanos suggests that it took refuge in the
+Asturias. At any rate, dances of the 10th and 12th centuries
+have been preserved uncorrupted. The earliest dances known
+were the <i>Turdion</i>, the <i>Gibidana</i>, the <i>Pié-de-gibao</i>, and (later) the
+<i>Madama Orleans</i>, the <i>Alemana</i> and the <i>Pavana</i>. Under Philip
+IV. theatrical dancing was in high popularity, and ballets were
+organized with extraordinary magnificence of decoration and
+costume. They supplanted the national dances, and the <i>Zarabanda</i>
+and <i>Chacona</i> were practically extinct in the 18th century.
+It is at this period that the famous modern Spanish dances, the
+<i>Bolero</i>, <i>Seguidilla</i> and the <i>Fandango</i>, first appear. Of these the
+<i>Fandango</i> is the most important. It is danced by two people in
+6-8 time, beginning slowly and tenderly, the rhythm marked by
+the click of castanets, the snapping of the fingers and the
+stamping of feet, and the speed gradually increasing until a
+whirl of exaltation is reached. A feature of the <i>Fandango</i> and
+also of the <i>Seguidilla</i> is a sudden pause of the music towards the
+end of each measure, upon which the dancers stand rigid in the
+attitudes in which the stopping of the music found them, and
+only move again when the music is resumed. M. Vuillier, in his
+<i>History of Dancing</i>, gives the following description of the <i>Fandango</i>:&mdash;&ldquo;Like
+an electric shock, the notes of the Fandango animate
+all hearts. Men and women, young and old, acknowledge
+the power of this air over the ears and soul of every Spaniard.
+The young men spring to their places, rattling castanets or
+imitating their sound by snapping their fingers. The girls are
+remarkable for the willowy languor and lightness of their movements,
+the voluptuousness of their attitudes&mdash;beating the
+exactest time with tapping heels. Partners tease and entreat
+and pursue each other by turns. Suddenly the music stops, and
+each dancer shows his skill by remaining absolutely motionless,
+bounding again into the full life of the Fandango as the orchestra
+strikes up. The sound of the guitar, the violin, the rapid tic-tac
+of heels (<i>taconeos</i>), the crack of fingers and castanets, the supple
+swaying of the dancers, fill the spectator with ecstasy. The
+measure whirls along in a rapid triple time. Spangles glitter;
+the sharp clank of ivory and ebony castanets beats out the
+cadence of strange, throbbing, deepening notes&mdash;assonances
+unknown to music, but curiously characteristic, effective and
+intoxicating. Amidst the rustle of silks, smiles gleam over white
+teeth, dark eyes sparkle and droop and flash up again in flame.
+All is flutter and glitter, grace and animation&mdash;quivering,
+sonorous, passionate, seductive.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Bolero</i> is a comparatively modern dance, having been
+invented by Sebastian Cerezo, a celebrated dancer of the time of
+King Charles III. It is remarkable for the free use made in it
+of the arms, and is said to be derived from the ancient <i>Zarabanda</i>,
+a violent and licentious dance, which has entirely disappeared,
+and with which the later Saraband has practically nothing in
+common. The step of the <i>Bolero</i> is low and gliding but well
+marked. It is danced by one or more couples. The <i>Seguidilla</i> is
+hardly less ancient than the <i>Fandango</i>, which it resembles.
+Every province in Spain has its own <i>Seguidilla</i>, and the dance is
+accompanied by <i>coplas</i>, or verses, which are sung either to
+traditional melodies or to the tunes of local composers; indeed,
+the national music of Spain consists largely of these coplas.
+Baron Davillier, among several specimens of <i>Seguidillas</i>, gives
+this one</p>
+
+<table class="reg f90" summary="poem"><tr><td> <div class="poemr">
+<p>&ldquo;Mi corazon volando</p>
+ <p class="i05">Se fué á tu pecho;</p>
+ <p class="i05">Le cortaste las alas,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Y quédo dentro.</p>
+ <p class="i2">Por atrevido</p>
+ <p class="i05">Se quedará por siempre</p>
+ <p class="i2">En el metido.&rdquo;<a name="fa5e" id="fa5e" href="#ft5e"><span class="sp">5</span></a></p>
+</div> </td></tr></table>
+
+<p>M. Vuillier quotes a <i>copla</i> which he heard at Polenza, in the
+Balearic Islands. This verse is formed on the rhythm of the
+<i>Malagueña</i>:</p>
+
+<table class="reg f90" summary="poem"><tr><td> <div class="poemr">
+<p>&ldquo;Una estrella se ha pardida</p>
+ <p class="i1">En el ciel y no parece;</p>
+ <p class="i05">En tu cara se ha metido;</p>
+ <p class="i1">Y en tu frente resplandece.&rdquo;<a name="fa6e" id="fa6e" href="#ft6e"><span class="sp">6</span></a></p>
+</div> </td></tr></table>
+
+<p>The <i>Jota</i> is the national dance of Aragon, a lively and splendid,
+but withal dignified and reticent, dance derived from the 16th-century
+<i>Passacaille</i>. It is still used as a religious dance. The
+<i>Cachuca</i> is a light and graceful dance in triple time. It is performed
+by a single dancer of either sex. The head and shoulders
+play an important part in the movements of this dance. Other
+provincial dances now in existence are the <i>Jaleo de Jerez</i>, a whirling
+measure performed by gipsies, the <i>Palotéa</i>, the <i>Polo</i>, the
+<i>Gallegada</i>, the <i>Muyneria</i>, the <i>Habas Verdes</i>, the <i>Zapateado</i>, the
+<i>Zorongo</i>, the <i>Vito</i>, the <i>Tirano</i> and the <i>Tripola Trapola</i>. Most of
+these dances are named either after the places where they are
+danced or after the composers who have invented tunes for them.
+Many of them are but slight variations from the <i>Fandango</i> and
+<i>Seguidilla</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The history of court dancing in Great Britain is practically
+the same as that of France, and need not occupy much of our
+attention here. But there are strictly national dances still in
+existence which are quite peculiar to the country, and may be
+traced back to the dances and games of the Saxon gleemen.
+The Egg dance and the Carole were both Saxon dances, the Carole
+being a Yule-tide festivity, of which the present-day Christmas
+carol is a remnant. The oldest dances which remain unchanged
+in England are the Morris dances, which were introduced in the
+time of Edward III. The name Morris or Moorish refers to the
+origin of these dances, which are said to have been brought back
+by John of Gaunt from his travels in Spain. The Morris dances
+are associated with May-day, and are danced round a maypole
+to a lively and capering step, some of the performers having bells
+fastened to their knees in the Moorish manner. They are dressed
+as characters of old English tradition, such as Robin Hood,
+Maid Marian, Friar Tuck, Little John and Tom the Piper. All
+the true country dances of Great Britain are of an active and
+lively measure; they may all, indeed, be said to be founded on
+the jig; and the hornpipe, which is a kind of jig, is the national
+dance of England. Captain Cook, on his voyages, made his sailors
+dance hornpipes in calm weather to keep them in good health.
+A characteristic of English dances was that they partook to a
+great extent of the nature of games; there was little variety in
+the steps, which were nearly all those of the jig or hornpipe, but
+these were incorporated into various games or plays, of which
+the Morris dances were the most elaborate. Richard Baxter
+wrote that &ldquo;sometimes the Morris dancers would come into the
+church in all their linen and scarves and antic dresses, with
+Morris bells jingling at their legs; and as soon as Common
+Prayer was read, did haste and presently to their play again.&rdquo;
+May-day has always been celebrated in England with rustic
+dances and festivities. Before the Reformation there were no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page799" id="page799"></a>799</span>
+really national dances in use at court; but in the reign of
+Elizabeth the homely, domestic style of dancing reached the
+height of its popularity. Remnants of many of these dances
+remain to-day in the games played by children and country
+people; &ldquo;Hunt the Slipper,&rdquo; &ldquo;Kiss in the Ring,&rdquo; &ldquo;Here we go
+round the Mulberry Bush,&rdquo; are examples. All the Tudor dances
+were kissing dances, and must have been the occasion of a great
+deal of merriment. Mrs Groves gives the following description
+of the Cushion dance:&mdash;&ldquo;The dance is begun by a single person,
+man or woman, who, taking a cushion in hand, dances about the
+room, and at the end of a short time stops and sings: &lsquo;This
+dance it will no farther go,&rsquo; to which the musician answers:
+&rsquo;I pray you, good sir, why say so?&rsquo; &lsquo;Because Joan Sanderson
+will not come to.&rsquo; &lsquo;She must come to whether she will or no,&rsquo;
+returns the musician, and then the dancer lays the cushion before
+a woman; she kneels and he kisses her, singing &lsquo;Welcome, Joan
+Sanderson.&rsquo; Then she rises, takes up the cushion, and both
+dance and sing &lsquo;Prinkum prankum is a fine dance, and shall we
+go dance it over again?&rsquo; Afterwards the woman takes the
+cushion and does as the man did.&rdquo; Other popular dances&mdash;generally
+adapted to the tunes of popular songs, the nature of
+some of which may be guessed from their titles&mdash;were the
+Trenchmore, Omnium-gatherum, Tolly-polly, Hoite cum toite,
+Dull Sir John, Faine I would, Sillinger, All in a Garden Green,
+An Old Man&rsquo;s a Bed Full of Bones, If All the World were Paper,
+John, Come Kiss Me Now, Cuckholds All Awry, Green Sleeves
+and Pudding Pies, Lumps of Pudding, Under and Over, Up Tails
+All, The Slaughter House, Rub her Down with Straw, Have at
+thy Coat Old Woman, The Happy Marriage, Dissembling Love,
+Sweet Kate, Once I Loved a Maiden Fair. Dancing practically
+disappeared during the Puritan <i>régime</i>, but with the Restoration
+it again became popular. It underwent no considerable developments,
+however, until the reign of Queen Anne, when the glories
+of Bath were revived in the beginning of the 18th century, and
+Beau Nash drew up his famous codes of rules for the regulation
+of dress and manners, and founded the balls in which the polite
+French dances completely eclipsed the simpler English ones.
+An account of a dancing lesson witnessed by a fond parent at
+this time is worth quoting, as it shows how far the writer (but
+not his daughter) had departed from the jolly, romping traditions
+of the old English dances:&mdash;&ldquo;As the best institutions are liable
+to corruption, so, sir, I must acquaint you that very great abuses
+are crept into this entertainment. I was amazed to see my girl
+handed by and handing young fellows with so much familiarity,
+and I could not have thought it had been my child. They very
+often made use of a most impudent and lascivious step called
+<i>setting</i> to partners, which I know not how to describe to you
+but by telling you that it is the very reverse of <i>back</i> to <i>back</i>.
+At last an impudent young dog bid the fiddlers play a dance called
+<i>Moll Patley</i>, and, after having made two or three capers, ran to
+his partner, locked his arms in hers, and whisked her round
+cleverly above ground in such a manner that I, who sat upon one
+of the lowest benches, saw farther above her shoe than I can think
+fit to acquaint you with. I could no longer endure these enormities,
+wherefore, just as my girl was going to be made a whirligig,
+I ran in, seized my child and carried her home.&rdquo; What we may
+call polite dancing, when it became fashionable, soon invaded
+London, its first home being Madame Cornely&rsquo;s famous Carlisle
+House in Soho Square. Ranelagh and Vauxhall and Almack&rsquo;s
+were all extensively patronized, and the rage for magnificent
+entertainment and dancing culminated in the erection of the
+palatial Pantheon in Oxford Street&mdash;a place so universally
+patronized that even Dr Johnson was to be found there. White&rsquo;s
+and Boodle&rsquo;s were also famous assembly rooms, but the most
+exclusive of all these establishments was Almack&rsquo;s, the original
+of Brooks&rsquo;s Club.</p>
+
+<p>The only true national dances of Scotland are reels, strathspeys
+and flings, while in Ireland there is but one dance&mdash;the jig, which
+is there, however, found in many varieties and expressive of
+many shades of emotion, from the maddest gaiety to the wildest
+lament. Curiously enough, although the Welsh dance often,
+they have no strictly national dances.</p>
+
+<p>Dancing in present-day society is a comparatively simple affair,
+as five-sixths of almost all ball programmes consists of waltzes.
+The origin of the waltz is a much-debated subject, the French,
+Italians and Bavarians each claiming for their respective
+countries the honour of having given birth to it. As a matter of
+fact the waltz, as it is now danced, comes from Germany; but
+it is equally true that its real origin is French, since it is a development
+of the <i>Volte</i>, which in its turn came from the <i>Lavolta</i>
+of Provence, one of the most ancient of French dances. The
+<i>Lavolta</i> was fashionable in the 16th century and was the delight
+of the Valois court. The <i>Volte</i> danced by Henry III. was really
+a <i>Valse à deux pas</i>; and Castil-Blaze says that &ldquo;the waltz
+which we took again from the Germans in 1795 had been a French
+dance for four hundred years.&rdquo; The change, it is true, came upon
+it during its visit to Germany, hence the theory of its German
+origin. The first German waltz tune is dated 1770&mdash;&ldquo;Ach! du
+lieber Augustin.&rdquo; It was first danced at the Paris opera in 1793,
+in Gardel&rsquo;s ballet <i>La Dansomanie</i>. It was introduced to English
+ballrooms in 1812, when it roused a storm of ridicule and opposition,
+but it became popular when danced at Almack&rsquo;s by the
+emperor Alexander in 1816. The waltz <i>à trois temps</i> has a sliding
+step in which the movements of the knees play an important
+part. The <i>tempo</i> is moderate, so as to allow three distinct
+movements on the three beats of each bar; and the waltz is
+written in 3-4 time and in eight-bar sentences. Walking up and
+down the room and occasionally breaking into the step of the
+dance is not true waltzing, and the habit of pushing one&rsquo;s partner
+backwards along the room is an entirely English one. But the
+dancer must be able to waltz equally well in all directions,
+pivoting and crossing the feet when necessary in the reverse turn.
+It need hardly be said that the feet should never leave the floor
+in the true waltz. Gungl, Waldteufel and the Strauss family
+may be said to have moulded the modern waltz to its present
+form by their rhythmical and agreeable compositions. There
+are variations which include hopping and lurching steps; these
+are degradations, and foreign to the spirit of the true
+waltz.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Quadrille</i> is of some antiquity, and a dance of this kind
+was first brought to England from Normandy by William the
+Conqueror, and was common all over Europe in the 16th and
+17th centuries. The term quadrille means a kind of card game,
+and the dance is supposed to be in some way connected with
+the game. A species of quadrille appeared in a French ballet in
+1745, and since that time the dance has gone by that name.
+Like many other dances, it came from Paris to Almack&rsquo;s in
+1815, and in its modern form was danced in England for the
+first time by Lady Jersey, Lady Harriet Butler, Lady Susan
+Ryder and Miss Montgomery, with Count Aldegarde, Mr Montgomery,
+Mr Harley and Mr Montague. It immediately became
+popular. It then consisted of very elaborate steps, which in
+England have been simplified until the degenerate practice has
+become common of walking through the dance. The quadrille,
+properly danced, has many of the graces of the minuet. It is
+often stated that the square dance is of modern French origin.
+This is incorrect, and probably arises from a mistaken identification
+of the terms quadrille and square dance. &ldquo;Dull Sir John&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;Faine I would&rdquo; were square dances popular in England
+three hundred years ago.</p>
+
+<p>An account of the country-dance, with the names of some of
+the old dance-tunes, has been given above. The word is not, as
+has been supposed, an adaptation of the French <i>contre-danse</i>,
+neither is the dance itself French in origin. According to the
+<i>New English Dictionary</i>, <i>contre-danse</i> is a corruption of &ldquo;country-dance,&rdquo;
+possibly due to a peculiar feature of many of such dances,
+like Sir Roger de Coverley, where the partners are drawn up in
+lines opposite to each other. The earliest appearance of the
+French word is in its application to English dances, which are
+contrasted with the French; thus in the <i>Memoirs of Grammont</i>,
+Hamilton says: &ldquo;On quitta les danses françaises pour se mettre
+aux contre-danses.&rdquo; The English &ldquo;country-dances&rdquo; were introduced
+into France in the early part of the 18th century and
+became popular; later French modifications were brought back
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page800" id="page800"></a>800</span>
+to England under the French form of the name, and this, no
+doubt, caused the long-accepted but confused derivation.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Lancers</i> were invented by Laborde in Paris in 1836.
+They were brought over to England in 1850, and were made
+fashionable by Madame Sacré at her classes in Hanover Square
+Rooms. The first four ladies to dance the lancers in England
+were Lady Georgina Lygon, Lady Jane Fielding, Mdlle. Olga de
+Lechner and Miss Berkeley.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Polka</i>, the chief of the Bohemian national dances, was
+adopted by Society in 1835 at Prague. Josef Neruda had seen
+a peasant girl dancing and singing the polka, and had noted
+down the tune and the steps. From Prague it readily spread to
+Vienna, and was introduced to Paris by Cellarius, a dancing-master,
+who gave it at the Odéon in 1840. It took the public by
+storm, and spread like an infection through England and America.
+Everything was named after the polka, from public-houses to
+articles of dress. Mr Punch exerted his wit on the subject
+weekly, and even <i>The Times</i> complained that its French correspondence
+was interrupted, since the polka had taken the place
+of politics in Paris. The true polka has three slightly jumping
+steps, danced on the first three beats of a four-quaver bar, the
+last beat of which is employed as a rest while the toe of the unemployed
+foot is drawn up against the heel of the other.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Galop</i> is strictly speaking a Hungarian dance, which
+became popular in Paris in 1830. But some kind of a dance
+corresponding to the galop was always indulged in after <i>Voltes</i>
+and <i>Contre-danses</i>, as a relief from their grave and constrained
+measures.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Washington Post</i> and several varieties of <i>Barn-dance</i> are
+of American origin, and became fashionable towards the end of
+the 19th century.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Polka-Mazurka</i> is extremely popular in Vienna and Budapest,
+and is a favourite theme with Hungarian composers. The six
+movements of this dance occupy two bars of 3-4 time, and consist
+of a mazurka step joined to the polka. It is of Polish origin.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Polonaise</i> and <i>Mazurka</i> are both Polish dances, and are
+still fashionable in Russia and Poland. Every State ball in
+Russia is opened with the ceremonious Polonaise.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Schottische</i>, a kind of modified polka, was &ldquo;created&rdquo;
+by Markowski, who was the proprietor of a famous dancing
+academy in 1850. The <i>Highland Schottische</i> is a fling. The
+Fling and Reel are Celtic dances, and form the national dances
+of Scotland and Denmark. They are complicated measures
+of a studied and classical order, in which free use is made of the
+arms and of cries and stampings. The <i>Strathspey</i> is a slow and
+grandiose modification of the Reel.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sir Roger de Coverley</i> is the only one of the old English social
+dances which has survived to the present day, and it is frequently
+danced at the conclusion of the less formal sort of balls. It is a
+merry and lively game in which all the company take part, men
+and women facing each other in two long rows. The dancers
+are constantly changing places in such a way that if the dance is
+carried to its conclusion everyone will have danced with everyone
+else. The music was first printed in 1685, and is sometimes
+written in 2-4 time, sometimes in 6-8 time, and sometimes in
+3-9 time.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Cotillon</i> is a modern development of the French dance of
+the same name referred to above. It is an extremely elaborate
+dance, in which a great many toys and accessories are employed;
+hundreds of figures may be contrived for it, in which presents,
+toys, lighted tapers, biscuits, air-balloons and hurdles are used.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ballet, &amp;c.</i>&mdash;The modern ballet (q.v.) seems to have been first
+produced on a considerable scale in 1489 at Tortona, before
+Duke Galeazzo of Milan. It soon became a common amusement
+on great occasions at the European courts. The ordinary length
+was five acts, each containing several <i>entrées</i>, and each <i>entrée</i>
+containing several quadrilles. The accessories of painting,
+sculpture and movable scenery were employed, and the representation
+often took place at night. The allegorical, moral and
+ludicrous ballets were introduced to France by Baïf in the time
+of Catherine de&rsquo; Medici. The complex nature of these exhibitions
+may be gathered from the title of one played at Turin in 1634&mdash;<i>La
+verità nemica della apparenza, sollevata dal tempo.</i> Of the
+ludicrous, one of the best known was the Venetian ballet of <i>I a
+veritá raminga</i>. Now and then, however, a high political aim
+may be discovered, as in the &ldquo;Prosperity of the Arms of France,&rdquo;
+danced before Richelieu in 1641, or &ldquo;Religion uniting Great
+Britain to the rest of the World,&rdquo; danced at London on the
+marriage of Princess Elizabeth to the elector Frederick. Outside
+the theatre, the Portuguese revived an ambulatory ballet which
+was played on the canonization of Carlo Borromeo, and to
+which they gave the name of the Tyrrhenic Pomp. During this
+time also the ceremonial ball (with all its elaborate detail of
+<i>courante</i>, minuet and saraband) was cultivated. The fathers of
+the church assembled at Trent gave a ball in which they took a
+part. Masked balls, too, resembling in some respects the Roman
+Saturnalia, became common towards the end of the 17th century.
+In France a ball was sometimes diversified by a masquerade,
+carried on by a limited number of persons in character-costume.
+Two of the most famous were named &ldquo;au Sauvage&rdquo; and &ldquo;des
+Sorciers.&rdquo; In 1715 the regent of France started a system of
+public balls in the opera-house, which did not succeed. Dancing,
+also, formed a leading element in the Opéra Français introduced
+by Quinault. His subjects were chiefly marvellous, drawn from
+the classical mythologies; and the choral dancing was not merely
+<i>divertissement</i>, but was intended to assist and enrich the dramatic
+action of the whole piece.</p>
+
+<p><i>Musical Gymnastics.</i>&mdash;Dancing is an important branch of
+physical education. Long ago Locke pointed out (<i>Education</i>,
+§§ 67, 196) that the effects of dancing are not confined to the
+body; it gives to children, he says, not mere outward gracefulness
+of motion, but manly thoughts and a becoming confidence.
+Only lately, however, has the advantage been recognized of
+making gymnastics attractive by connecting it with what Homer
+calls &ldquo;the sweetest and most perfect of human enjoyments.&rdquo;
+The practical principle against heavy weights and intense
+monotonous exertion of particular muscles was thus stated by
+Samuel Smiles (<i>Physical Education</i>, p. 148):&mdash;&ldquo;The greatest
+benefit is derived from that exercise which calls into action the
+greatest number of muscles, and in which the action of these is
+intermitted at the shortest intervals.&rdquo; It required only one
+further step to see how, if light and changing movements were
+desirable, music would prove a powerful stimulus to gymnastics.
+It touches the play-impulse, and substitutes a spontaneous flow
+of energy for the mechanical effort of the will. The force of
+imitation or contagion, one of the most valuable forces in
+education, is also much increased by the state of exhilaration
+into which dancing puts the system. This idea was embodied
+by Froebel in his <i>Kindergarten</i> plan, and was developed by Jahn
+and Schreber in Germany, by Dio Lewis in the United States,
+and by Ling (the author of the <i>Swedish Cure Movement</i>) in
+Sweden.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;For the old division of the <i>Ars Gymnastica</i> into
+<i>palaestrica</i> and <i>saltatoria</i>, and of the latter into <i>cubistica</i>, <i>sphaeristica</i>
+and <i>orchestica</i>, see the learned work of Hieronymus Mercurialis, <i>De
+arte Gymnastica</i> (Amsterdam, 1572). Cubistic was the art of throwing
+somersaults, and is described minutely by Tuccaro in his <i>Trois
+Dialogues</i> (Paris, 1599). Sphaeristic included several complex games
+at ball and tilting&mdash;the Greek <span class="grk" title="kôrukos">&#954;&#974;&#961;&#965;&#954;&#959;&#962;</span>, and the Roman <i>trigonalis</i>
+and <i>paganica</i>. Orchestic, divided by Plutarch into <i>latio</i>, <i>figura</i> and
+<i>indicatio</i>, was really imitative dancing, the &ldquo;silent poetry&rdquo; of
+Simonides. The importance of the <span class="grk" title="cheironomia">&#967;&#949;&#953;&#961;&#959;&#957;&#959;&#956;&#943;&#945;</span> or hand-movement
+is indicated by Ovid:&mdash;&ldquo;Si vox est, canta; si mollia brachia, salta.&rdquo;
+For further information as to modern dancing, see Rameau&rsquo;s <i>Le
+maître à danser</i> (1726); Querlon&rsquo;s <i>Le triomphe des grâces</i> (1774);
+Cahousac, <i>La danse ancienne et moderne</i> (1754); Vuillier, <i>History of
+Dancing</i> (Eng. trans., 1897); Giraudet, <i>Traité de la danse</i> (1900).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. C. S.; A. B. F. Y.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1e" id="ft1e" href="#fa1e"><span class="fn">1</span></a> Compare the Chica of South America, the Fandango of Spain,
+and the Angrismene or la Fachée of modern Greece. See also
+<i>Romaunt de la rose</i>, v. 776.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2e" id="ft2e" href="#fa2e"><span class="fn">2</span></a> The Greek <span class="grk" title="karpaia">&#954;&#945;&#961;&#960;&#945;&#943;&#945;</span> represented the surprise by robbers of a warrior
+ploughing a field. The gymnopaedic dances imitated the sterner
+sports of the palaestra.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3e" id="ft3e" href="#fa3e"><span class="fn">3</span></a> The Greek Lenaea and Dionysia had a distinct reference to the
+seasons.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4e" id="ft4e" href="#fa4e"><span class="fn">4</span></a> The Pantomimus was an outgrowth from the <i>canticum</i> or choral
+singing of the older comedies and <i>fabulae Atellanae</i>.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5e" id="ft5e" href="#fa5e"><span class="fn">5</span></a> &ldquo;My heart flew to thy breast. Thou didst cut its wings, so that
+it remained there. And now it has waxed daring, and will stay with
+thee for evermore.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6e" id="ft6e" href="#fa6e"><span class="fn">6</span></a> &ldquo;A star is lost and appears not in the sky; in thy face it has set
+itself; on thy brow it shines.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANCOURT, FLORENT CARTON<a name="ar96" id="ar96"></a></span> (1661-1725), French dramatist
+and actor, was born at Fontainebleau on the 1st of November
+1661. He belonged to a family of rank, and his parents entrusted
+his education to Père de la Rue, a Jesuit, who made earnest
+efforts to induce him to join the order. But he had no religious
+vocation and proceeded to study law. He practised at the bar
+for some time, but his marriage to the daughter of the comedian
+François Lenoir de la Thorillière led him to become an actor,
+and in 1685, in spite of the strong opposition of his family, he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page801" id="page801"></a>801</span>
+appeared at the Théâtre Français. His gifts as a comedian gave
+him immediate and marked success, both with the public and
+with his fellow actors. He was the spokesman of his company
+on occasions of state, and in this capacity he frequently appeared
+before Louis XIV., who treated him with great favour. One of
+his most famous impersonations was Alceste in the <i>Misanthrope</i>
+of Molière. His first play, <i>Le Notaire obligeant</i>, produced in 1685,
+was well received. <i>La Désolation des joueuses</i> (1687) was still
+more successful. <i>Le Chevalier à la mode</i> (1687) is generally
+regarded as his best work, though his claim to original authorship
+in this and some other cases has been disputed. In <i>Le
+Chevalier à la mode</i> appears the <i>bourgeoise</i> infatuated with the
+desire to be an aristocrat. The type is developed in <i>Les Bourgeoises
+à la mode</i> (1692) and <i>Les Bourgeoises de qualité</i> (1700).
+Dancourt was a prolific author, and produced some sixty plays
+in all. Some years before his death he terminated his career
+both as an actor and as an author by retiring to his château at
+Courcelles le Roi, in Berry, where he employed himself in making
+a poetical translation of the Psalms and in writing a sacred
+tragedy. He died on the 7th of December 1725. The plays of
+Dancourt are faithful descriptions of the manners of the time,
+and as such have real historical value. The characters are drawn
+with a realistic touch that led to his being styled by Charles
+Palissot the Teniers of comedy. He is very successful in his
+delineation of low life, and especially of the peasantry. The
+dialogue is sparkling, witty and natural. Many of the incidents
+of his plots were derived from actual occurrences in the &ldquo;fast&rdquo;
+and scandalous life of the period, and several of his characters
+were drawn from well-known personages of the day. Most of
+the plays incline to the type of farce rather than of pure comedy.
+Voltaire defined his talent in the words: &ldquo;Ce que Regnard était
+à l&rsquo;égard de Molière dans la haute comédie, le comédien Dancourt
+l&rsquo;était dans la farce.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>His two daughters, Manon and Marie Anne (Mimi), both
+obtained success on the stage of the Théâtre Français.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The complete works of Dancourt were published in 1760 (12 vols.
+12mo). An edition of his <i>Théâtre choisi</i>, with a preface by F. Sarcey,
+appeared in 1884.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANDELION<a name="ar97" id="ar97"></a></span> (<i>Taraxacum officinale</i>), a perennial herb belonging
+to the natural order Compositae. The plant has a wide range,
+being found in Europe, Central Asia, North America, and the
+Arctic regions, and also in the south temperate zone. The leaves
+form a spreading rosette on the very short stem; they are smooth,
+of a bright shining green, sessile, and tapering downwards. The
+name dandelion is derived from the French <i>dent-de-lion</i>, an
+appellation given on account of the tooth-like lobes of the leaves.
+The long tap-root has a simple or many-headed rhizome; it is
+black externally, and is very difficult of extirpation. The flower-stalks
+are smooth, brittle, leafless, hollow, and very numerous.
+The flowers bloom from April till August, and remain open from
+five or six in the morning to eight or nine at night. The flower-heads
+are of a golden yellow, and reach 1½ to 2 in. in width;
+the florets are all strap-shaped. The fruits are olive or dull
+yellow in colour, and are each surmounted by a long beak, on
+which rests a pappus of delicate white hairs, which occasions
+the ready dispersal of the fruit by the wind; each fruit contains
+one seed. The globes formed by the plumed fruits are nearly
+two inches in diameter. The involucre consists of an outer
+spreading (or reflexed) and an inner and erect row of bracts.
+In all parts of the plant a milky juice is contained, which has a
+somewhat complex composition. The chief constituent is
+taraxacin, a neutral principle. In addition the juice contains
+taraxacerin (derived from the former), asparagin, inulin, resins
+and salts. An extract (dose 5-15 grains), a liquid extract (dose
+½-1 drachm) and a succus (dose 1-2 drachms) of the root are all
+used medicinally. For the purposes formerly recognized taraxacum
+is now never used, but it has been shown to possess definite
+cholagogue properties, and may therefore be prescribed along
+with ammonium chloride in cases of hepatic constipation, which
+it very constantly relieves. The root&mdash;which is the medicinal
+product&mdash;is most bitter from March to July, but the milky juice
+it contains is less abundant in the summer than in the autumn.
+For this reason, the extract and succus are usually prepared
+during the months of September and October. After a frost a
+change takes place in the root, which loses its bitterness to a
+large extent. In the dried state the root will not keep well,
+being quickly attacked by insects. Externally it is brown and
+wrinkled, internally white, with a yellow centre and concentric
+paler rings. It is two inches to a foot long, and about a quarter
+to half an inch in diameter. The leaves are bitter, but are sometimes
+eaten as a salad; they serve as food for silkworms when
+mulberry leaves are not to be had. The root is roasted as a
+substitute for coffee. Several varieties of the dandelion are
+recognized by botanists; they differ in the degree and mode of
+cutting of the leaf-margin and the erect or spreading character
+of the outer series of bracts. The variety <i>palustre</i>, which affects
+boggy situations, and flowers in late summer and autumn, has
+nearly entire leaves, and the outer bracts of its involucre are
+erect.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:527px; height:668px" src="images/img801.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption">Dandelion (<i>Taraxacum officinale</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption">1, Unopened head; 2, ripe head from which all the fruits except
+two have been removed; 3, one floret, enlarged; 4, one fruit.</td></tr></table>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANDOLO,<a name="ar98" id="ar98"></a></span> the name of one of the most illustrious patrician
+families of Venice, of which the earliest recorded member was
+one of the electors of the first doge (A.D. 697). The Dandolo
+gave to Venice four doges; of these the first and most famous was
+Enrico Dandolo (<i>c.</i> 1120-1205), elected on the 1st of January
+1193 (<i>more Veneto</i>, 1192). He had distinguished himself in various
+military enterprises and diplomatic negotiations in the course of
+an active career, and although over seventy years old and of
+very weak sight (the story that he had been made blind by the
+emperor Manuel Comnenus while he was at Constantinople is a
+legend), he proved a most energetic and capable ruler. His first
+care was to re-establish Venetian authority over the Dalmatians
+who had rebelled with the king of Hungary&rsquo;s protection, but he
+failed to capture Zara, owing to the arrival of the Pisan fleet,
+and although the latter was defeated by the Venetians, the undertaking
+was suspended. In the meanwhile the situation in the
+East was becoming critical. The Eastern emperor Isaac II.
+Angelus had been deposed, imprisoned, and blinded by his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page802" id="page802"></a>802</span>
+brother Alexius, who usurped the throne. The new emperor
+proved unfriendly to the Venetians and made difficulties about
+renewing their privileges. In the West a new crusade to the
+Holy Land was in preparation, and the crusaders sent ambassadors,
+one of whom was Villehardouin, the historian of the
+expedition, to ask the Venetians to give them passage and
+means of transport (1201). After much deliberation the republic
+agreed to transport 4500 horse and 29,000 foot to Palestine with
+provisions for one year, for a sum of 85,000 marks; in addition
+50 Venetian galleys would be provided free of charge, while
+Venice was to receive half the conquests made by the crusaders.
+But as the time agreed upon for the departure approached, it
+appeared that the crusaders had not the money to pay the stipulated
+advance. Dandolo then proposed that if they helped him
+to reduce Zara payment might be deferred. Some of the crusaders
+disapproved of this attack on a Christian city, but the
+majority, only too glad of an opportunity for plunder, willingly
+agreed. The expedition sailed on the 8th of October 1202, three
+hundred sail in all, with the aged Dandolo himself in command.
+Zara was taken and pillaged, for which the Venetians were
+severely reprimanded by the pope. But new possibilities of
+conquest were now opened up at the suggestion of Alexius, the
+son of the deposed emperor Isaac. He promised the crusaders
+that if they went first to Constantinople and re-instated Isaac,
+the latter would maintain them for a year, contribute 10,000
+men and 200,000 marks for the expedition to Egypt, and subject
+the Eastern to the Western Church. The proposal was accepted,
+largely owing to the influence of Dandolo, who saw in it a means
+for further extending the dominions and commerce of the
+Venetians. After wintering at Zara the fleet set sail on the 7th
+of April 1203, and on the 23rd of June anchored in the Bosporus.
+After long parleys the city was attacked by land and sea on the
+17th of July (the fleet being commanded by Dandolo) and taken
+by storm. The emperor Alexius fled, and Isaac reoccupied the
+throne, but, although grateful to the crusaders, he was not disposed
+to fulfil the promises made by his son. Tumults between
+crusaders and Greeks arose, and the people of the city, excited
+by a certain Alexis Murzuphlus, murmured at the new taxes
+which were imposed on them. A revolt broke out, and an officer
+named Nicholas Canabus was placed on the throne; Prince
+Alexius was strangled by order of Murzuphlus, Isaac died of the
+shock, Murzuphlus imprisoned Canabus and made himself
+emperor (Alexius V.). The crusaders thereupon attacked Constantinople
+a second time (12th of April 1204), and after a
+desperate struggle captured the city, which they subjected to
+hideous carnage. Immense booty was secured, the Venetians
+obtaining among other treasures the four bronze horses which
+adorn the façade of St Mark&rsquo;s. The Eastern empire was abolished,
+and a feudal Latin empire erected in its stead. The
+leaders of the crusaders then met to elect an emperor. Dandolo
+was one of the candidates, but Count Baldwin of Flanders was
+elected and crowned on the 23rd of May. The Venetians were
+given Crete and several other islands and ports in the Levant,
+which formed an uninterrupted chain from Venice to the Black
+Sea, a large part of Constantinople (whence the doge assumed
+the title of &ldquo;lord of a quarter and a half of Romania&rdquo;), and
+many valuable privileges. But hardly had the new state been
+established when various provinces rose in rebellion and the
+Bulgarians invaded Thrace. A Latin army was defeated by
+them at Adrianople (April 1205), and the emperor himself was
+captured and killed, the fragments of the force being saved only
+by Dandolo&rsquo;s prowess. But he was now old and ill, and on the
+23rd of June 1205 he died. He certainly consolidated Venice&rsquo;s
+dominion in the East and increased its commercial prosperity
+to a very high degree. But the policy he pursued in turning the
+crusaders against Constantinople, in order to promote the
+interests of the republic, while serving to break up the Greek
+empire, created in its place a Latin state that was far too feeble
+to withstand the onslaught of Greek national feeling and
+Orthodox fanaticism; at the same time the Greeks were greatly
+weakened and their power of resisting the Turks consequently
+lessened. This paved the way for the Turkish invasion of
+Europe, which proved an unmixed calamity for all Christendom,
+Venice included.</p>
+
+<p>Enrico Dandolo&rsquo;s sons distinguished themselves in the public
+service, and his grandson Giovanni was doge from 1280 to 1289.
+The latter&rsquo;s son Andrea commanded the Venetian fleet in the
+war against Genoa in 1294, and, having been defeated and taken
+prisoner, he was so overwhelmed with shame that he committed
+suicide by beating his head against the mast (according to Andrea
+Navagero). Francesco Dandolo, also known as Dandolo Cane,
+was doge from 1329 to 1339. During his reign the Venetians
+went to war with Martino della Scala, lord of Verona, with the
+result that they occupied Treviso and otherwise extended their
+possessions on the <i>terra firma</i>. Andrea Dandolo (1307/10-1354),
+the last doge of the family, reigned from 1343 to 1354.
+He had been the first Venetian noble to take a degree at the
+university of Padua, where he had also been professor of jurisprudence.
+The terrible plague of 1348, wars with Genoa, against
+whom the great naval victory of Lojera was won in 1353, many
+treaties, and the subjugation of the seventh revolt of Zara, are
+the chief events of his reign. The poet Petrarch, who was the
+doge&rsquo;s intimate friend, was sent to Venice on a peace mission by
+Giovanni Visconti, lord of Milan. &ldquo;Just, incorruptible, full of
+zeal and of love for his country, and at the same time learned,
+of rare eloquence, wise, affable, and humane,&rdquo; is the poet&rsquo;s
+verdict on Andrea Dandolo (<i>Varior. epist.</i> xix.). Dandolo died
+on the 7th of September 1354. He is chiefly famous as a historian,
+and his <i>Annals</i> to the year 1280 are one of the chief sources
+of Venetian history for that period; they have been published
+by Muratori (<i>Rer. Ital. Script.</i> tom. xxi.). He also had a new
+code of laws compiled (issued in 1346) in addition to the statute
+of Jacopo Tiepolo.</p>
+
+<p>Another well-known member of this family was Silvestro
+Dandolo (1796-1866), son of Girolamo Dandolo, who was the
+last admiral of the Venetian republic and died an Austrian
+admiral in 1847. Silvestro was an Italian patriot and took part
+in the revolution of 1848.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;S. Romanin, <i>Storia documentata di Venezia</i>
+(Venice, 1853); among more recent books H. Kretschmayr&rsquo;s
+excellent <i>Geschichte von Venedig</i> (Gotha, 1905) should be consulted:
+it contains a bibliography of the authorities and all the latest researches
+and discoveries; C. Cipolla and G. Monticolo have published
+many essays and editions of chronicles in the <i>Archivio Veneto</i>, and the
+&ldquo;Fonti per la Storia d&rsquo;Italia,&rdquo; in the <i>Istituto storico italiano</i>; H.
+Simonsfeld has written a life of <i>Andrea Dandolo</i> in German (Munich,
+1876).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(L. V.*)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANDOLO, VINCENZO,<a name="ar99" id="ar99"></a></span> <span class="sc">Count</span> (1758-1819), Italian chemist
+and agriculturist, was born at Venice, of good family, though not
+of the same house as the famous doges, and began his career as a
+physician. He was a prominent opponent of the oligarchical
+party in the revolution which took place on the approach of
+Napoleon; and he was one of the envoys sent to seek the protection
+of the French. When the request was refused, and
+Venice was placed under Austria, he removed to Milan, where he
+was made member of the great council. In 1799, on the invasion
+of the Russians and the overthrow of the Cisalpine republic,
+Dandolo retired to Paris, where, in the same year, he published
+his treatise <i>Les Hommes nouveaux, ou moyen d&rsquo;opérer une régénération
+nouvelle</i>. But he soon after returned to the neighbourhood
+of Milan, to devote himself to scientific agriculture. In 1805
+Napoleon made him governor of Dalmatia, with the title of
+<i>provéditeur général</i>, in which position Dandolo distinguished
+himself by his efforts to remove the wretchedness and idleness of
+the people, and to improve the country by draining the pestilential
+marshes and introducing better methods of agriculture.
+When, in 1809, Dalmatia was re-annexed to the Illyrian provinces,
+Dandolo returned to Venice, having received as his reward
+from the French emperor the title of count and several other
+distinctions. He died in his native city on the 13th of December
+1819.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Dandolo published in Italian several treatises on agriculture,
+vine-cultivation, and the rearing of cattle and sheep; a work on
+silk-worms, which was translated into French by Fontanelle; a
+work on the discoveries in chemistry which were made in the last
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page803" id="page803"></a>803</span>
+quarter of the 18th century (published 1796); and translations of
+several of the best French works on chemistry.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANDY,<a name="ar100" id="ar100"></a></span> a word of uncertain origin which about 1813-1816
+became a London colloquialism for the exquisite or fop of the
+period. It seems to have been in use on the Scottish border at
+the end of the 18th century, its full form, it is suggested, being
+&ldquo;Jack-a-Dandy,&rdquo; which from 1659 had a sense much like its
+later one. It is probably ultimately derived from the French
+<i>dandin</i>, &ldquo;a ninny or booby,&rdquo; but a more direct derivation was
+suggested at the time of the uprise of the Regency dandies. In
+<i>The Northampton Mercury</i>, under date of the 17th of April
+1819, occurs the following: &ldquo;Origin of the word &lsquo;dandy.&rsquo;
+This term, which has been recently applied to a species of
+reptile very common in the metropolis, appears to have
+arisen from a small silver coin struck by King Henry VII., of
+little value, called a <i>dandiprat</i>; and hence Bishop Fleetwood
+observes the term is applied to worthless and contemptible
+persons.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was Beau Brummel, the high-priest of fashion, who gave
+dandyism its great vogue. But before his day foppery in dress
+had become something more than the personal eccentricity
+which it had been in the Stuart days and earlier. About the
+middle of the 18th century was founded the Macaroni Club.
+This was a band of young men of rank who had visited Italy
+and sought to introduce the southern elegances of manner and
+dress into England. The Macaronis gained their name from
+their introduction of the Italian dish to English tables, and were
+at their zenith about 1772, when their costume is described as
+&ldquo;white silk breeches, very tight coat and vest with enormous
+white neckcloths, white silk stockings and diamond-buckled
+red-heeled shoes.&rdquo; For some time the moving spirit of the club
+was Charles James Fox. It was with the advent of Brummel,
+however, that the cult of dandyism became a social force. Beau
+Brummel was supreme dictator in matters of dress, and the prince
+regent is said to have wept when he disapproved of the cut of
+the royal coat. Around the Beau collected a band of young
+men whose insolent and affected manners made them universally
+unpopular. Their chief glory was their clothes. They wore
+coats of blue or brown cloth with brass buttons, the coat-tails
+almost touching the heels. Their trousers were buckskin, so
+tight that it is said they &ldquo;could only be taken off as an eel
+would be divested of his skin.&rdquo; A pair of highly-polished
+Hessian boots, a waistcoat buttoned incredibly tight so as to
+produce a small waist, and opening at the breast to exhibit the
+frilled shirt and cravat, completed the costume of the true dandy.
+Upon the Beau&rsquo;s disgrace and ruin, Lord Alvanley was regarded
+as leader of the dandies and &ldquo;first gentleman in England.&rdquo;
+Though in many ways a worthier man than Brummel, his vanity
+exposed him to much derision, and he fought a duel on
+Wimbledon Common with Morgan O&rsquo;Connell, who, in the House
+of Commons, had called him a &ldquo;bloated buffoon.&rdquo; After 1825
+&ldquo;dandy&rdquo; lost its invidious meaning, and came to be applied
+generally to those who were neat in dress rather than to those
+guilty of effeminacy.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Barbey D&rsquo;Aurevilly, <i>Du dandysme et de G. Brummel</i> (Paris,
+1887).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANEGELD,<a name="ar101" id="ar101"></a></span> an English national tax originally levied by
+Æthelred II. (the Unready) as a means of raising the tribute
+which was the price of the temporary cessation of the Danish
+ravages. This expedient of buying off the invader was first
+adopted in 991 ou the advice of certain great men of the kingdom.
+It was repeated in 994, 1002, 1007 and 1012. With the accession
+of the Danish king Canute, the original <i>raison d&rsquo;être</i> of the tax
+ceased to exist, but it continued to be levied, though for a
+different purpose, assuming now the character of an occasional
+war-tax. It was exceedingly burdensome, and its abolition by
+Edward the Confessor in 1051 was welcomed as a great relief.
+William the Conqueror revived it immediately after his accession,
+as a convenient method of national taxation, and it was with the
+object of facilitating its collection that he ordered the compilation
+of Domesday Book. It continued to be levied until 1163, in
+which year the name Danegeld appears for the last time in the
+Rolls. Its place was taken by other imposts of similar character
+but different name.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANELAGH,<a name="ar102" id="ar102"></a></span> the name given to those districts in the north
+and north-east of England which were settled by Danes and other
+Scandinavian invaders during the period of the Viking invasions.
+The real settlement of England by Danes began in the year 866
+with the appearance of a large army in East Anglia, which turned
+north in the following year. The Danes captured York and
+overthrew the Northumbrian kingdom, setting up a puppet
+king of their own. They encamped in Nottingham in 868, and
+Northern Mercia was soon in their hands; in 870 Edmund, king
+of the East Anglians, fell before them. During the next few years
+they maintained their hold on Mercia, and we have at this time
+coins minted in London with the inscription &ldquo;Alfdene rex,&rdquo; the
+name of the Danish leader. In the winter of 874-875 they
+advanced as far north as the Tyne, and at the same time Cambridge
+was occupied. In the meantime the great struggle with
+Alfred the Great was being carried on. This was terminated by the
+peace of Wedmore in 878, when the Danes withdrew from Wessex
+and settled finally in East Anglia under their king Guthrum.
+This peace was finally and definitely ratified in the document
+known as the peace of Alfred and Guthrum, which is probably to
+be referred to the year 880. The peace determined the boundary
+of Guthrum&rsquo;s East Anglian kingdom. According to the terms
+of the agreement the boundary was to run along the Thames
+estuary to the mouth of the Lea (a few miles east of London),
+then up the Lea to its source near Leighton Buzzard, then due
+north to Bedford, then eastwards up the Ouse to Watling Street
+somewhere near Fenny or Stony Stratford. From this point
+the boundary is left undefined, perhaps because the kingdoms
+of Alfred and Guthrum ceased to be conterminous here, though if
+Northamptonshire was included in the kingdom of Guthrum,
+as seems likely, the boundary must be carried a few miles along
+Watling Street. Thus Northern Mercia, East Anglia, the greater
+part of Essex and Northumbria were handed over to the
+Danes and henceforth constitute the district known as the
+Danelagh.</p>
+
+<p>The three chief divisions of the Danelagh were (1) the kingdom
+of Northumbria, (2) the kingdom of East Anglia, (3) the district
+of the Five (Danish) Boroughs&mdash;lands grouped round Leicester,
+Nottingham, Derby, Stamford and Lincoln, and forming a loose
+confederacy. Of the history of the two Danish kingdoms we
+know very little. Guthrum of East Anglia died in 890, and later
+we hear of a king Eric or Eohric who died in 902. Another
+Guthrum was ruling there in the days of Edward the Elder. The
+history of the Northumbrian kingdom is yet more obscure.
+After an interregnum consequent on the death of Healfdene the
+kingdom passed in 883 to one Guthred, son of Hardicanute, who
+ruled till 894, when his realm was taken over by King Alfred,
+though probably only under a very loose sovereignty. It may be
+noted here that Northumbria north of the Tyne, the old Bernicia,
+seems never to have passed under Danish authority and rule, but
+to have remained in independence until the general submission to
+Edward in 924.</p>
+
+<p>More is known of the history of the five boroughs. From 907
+onwards Edward the Elder, working together with Æthelred of
+Mercia and his wife, worked for the recovery of the Danelagh. In
+that year Chester was fortified. In 911-912 an advance on Essex
+and Hertfordshire was begun. In 914 Buckingham was fortified
+and the Danes of Bedfordshire submitted. In 917 Derby was
+the first of the five boroughs to fall, followed by Leicester a
+few months later. In the same year after a keen struggle all the
+Danes belonging to the &ldquo;borough&rdquo; of Northampton, as far north
+as the Welland (i.e. the border of modern Northamptonshire),
+submitted to Edward and at the same time Colchester was fortified;
+a large portion of Essex submitted and the whole of the East
+Anglian Danes came in. Stamford was the next to yield, soon
+followed by Nottingham, and in 920 there was a general submission
+on the part of the Danes and the reconquest of the Danelagh
+was now complete.</p>
+
+<p>Though the independent occupation of the Danelagh by
+Viking invaders did not last for more than fifty years at the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page804" id="page804"></a>804</span>
+outside, the Danes left lasting marks of their presence in these
+territories.</p>
+
+<p>The divisions of the land are foreign not native. The grouping
+of shires round a county town as distinct from the old national
+shires is probably of Scandinavian origin, and so certainly is the
+division of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire into &ldquo;ridings.&rdquo; In
+Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, part of Northamptonshire,
+Nottinghamshire, Rutlandshire (of later formation) and
+Yorkshire we have the counties divided into &ldquo;wapentakes&rdquo;
+instead of &ldquo;hundreds,&rdquo; again a mark of Danish influence.</p>
+
+<p>When we turn to the social divisions we find in Domesday and
+other documents classes of society in these districts bearing purely
+Norse names, <i>dreng</i>, <i>karl</i>, <i>karlman</i>, <i>bonde</i>, <i>thrall</i>, <i>lysing</i>, <i>hold</i>; in
+the system of taxation we have an assessment by <i>carucates</i> and
+not by hides and <i>virgates</i>, and the duodecimal rather than the
+decimal system of reckoning.</p>
+
+<p>The highly developed Scandinavian legal system has also left
+abundant traces in this district. We may mention specially the
+institution of the &ldquo;lawmen,&rdquo; whom we find as a judicial body in
+several of the towns in or near the Danelagh. They are found at
+Cambridge, Stamford, Lincoln, York and Chester. There can be
+no doubt that these &ldquo;lawmen,&rdquo; who can be shown to form a close
+parallel to and indeed the ultimate source of our jury, were of
+Scandinavian origin. Many other legal terms can be definitely
+traced to Scandinavian sources, and they are first found in use in
+the district of the Danelagh.</p>
+
+<p>The whole of the place nomenclature of Yorkshire, Lincolnshire,
+Nottinghamshire and Northern Northamptonshire is Scandinavian
+rather than native English, and in the remaining districts
+of the Danelagh a goodly proportion of Danish place-names may
+be found. Their influence is also evident in the dialects spoken
+in these districts to the present day. It is probable that until
+the end of the 10th century Scandinavian dialects were almost the
+sole language spoken in the district of the Danelagh, and when
+English triumphed, after an intermediate bilingual state, large
+numbers of words were adopted from the earlier Scandinavian
+speech.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle</i>, edited by Earle and Plummer
+(Oxford, 1892-1899); J. C. H. R. Steenstrup, <i>Normannerne</i> (4 vols.,
+1876-1882); and A. Bugge, <i>Vikingerne</i> (2 vols.).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(A. Mw.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANGERFIELD, THOMAS<a name="ar103" id="ar103"></a></span> (<i>c.</i> 1650-1685), English conspirator,
+was born about 1650 at Waltham, Essex, the son of a farmer.
+He began his career by robbing his father, and, after a rambling
+life, took to coining false money, for which offence and others he
+was many times imprisoned. False to everyone, he first tried to
+involve the duke of Monmouth and others by concocting information
+about a Presbyterian plot against the throne, and this
+having been proved a lie, he pretended to have discovered a
+Catholic plot against Charles II. This was known as the &ldquo;Meal-tub
+Plot,&rdquo; from the place where the incriminating documents
+were hidden at his suggestion, and found by the king&rsquo;s officers by
+his information. Mrs Elizabeth Cellier,&mdash;in whose house the tub
+was,&mdash;almoner to the countess of Powis, who had befriended
+Dangerfield when he posed as a Catholic, was, with her patroness,
+actually tried for high treason and acquitted (1680). Dangerfield,
+when examined at the bar of the House of Commons, made
+other charges against prominent Papists, and attempted to
+defend his character by publishing, among other pamphlets,
+<i>Dangerfield&rsquo;s Narrative</i>. This led to his trial for libel, and on the
+29th of June 1685 he received sentence to stand in the pillory on
+two consecutive days, be whipped from Aldgate to Newgate, and
+two days later from Newgate to Tyburn. On his way back he
+was struck in the eye with a cane by a barrister, Robert Francis,
+and died shortly afterwards from the blow. The barrister was,
+tried and executed for the murder.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANIEL,<a name="ar104" id="ar104"></a></span> the name given to the central figure<a name="fa1f" id="fa1f" href="#ft1f"><span class="sp">1</span></a> of the biblical
+Book of Daniel (see below), which is now generally regarded as a
+production dating from the time of Antiochus Epiphanes (175-164
+B.C.). There are no means of ascertaining anything definite
+concerning the origin of the hero Daniel. The account of him in
+Dan. i. has been generally misunderstood. According to i. 3, the
+Babylonian chief eunuch was commanded to bring &ldquo;certain of
+the children of Israel, and of the king&rsquo;s seed, and of the nobles&rdquo;
+to serve in the court. Many commentators have considered this
+to mean that some of the children were of the royal Judaean line
+of Jewish noble families, an interpretation which is not justified
+by the wording of the passage, which contains nothing to indicate
+that the author meant to convey the idea that Daniel was either
+royal or noble. Josephus,<a name="fa2f" id="fa2f" href="#ft2f"><span class="sp">2</span></a> never doubting the historicity of
+Daniel, made the prophet a relative of Zedekiah and consequently
+of Jehoiakim, a conclusion which he apparently drew from the
+same passage, i. 3. Pseudo-Epiphanius,<a name="fa3f" id="fa3f" href="#ft3f"><span class="sp">3</span></a> again, probably having
+the same source in mind, thought that Daniel was a Jewish
+noble. The true Epiphanius<a name="fa4f" id="fa4f" href="#ft4f"><span class="sp">4</span></a> even gives the name of his father as
+Sabaan, and states that the prophet was born at Upper Beth-Horon,
+a village near Jerusalem. The after life and death of the
+seer are as obscure as his origin. The biblical account throws no
+light on the subject. According to the rabbis,<a name="fa5f" id="fa5f" href="#ft5f"><span class="sp">5</span></a> Daniel went back
+to <span class="correction" title="amended from Jersualem">Jerusalem</span> with the return of the captivity, and is supposed to
+have been one of the founders of the mythical Great Synagogue.
+Other traditions affirm that he died and was buried in Babylonia
+in the royal vault, while the Jewish traveller Benjamin of
+Tudela (12th cent. A.D.) was shown his tomb in Susa, which is
+also mentioned by the Arab, Abulfaragius (Bar-hebraeus).
+The author of <i>Daniel</i> did not pretend to give any sketch of the
+prophet&rsquo;s career, but was content merely with making him the
+central figure, around which to group more or less disconnected
+narratives and accounts of visions. In view of these facts, and
+also of the generally inaccurate character of all the historical
+statements in the work, there is really no evidence to prove even
+the existence of the Daniel described in the book bearing his name.</p>
+
+<p>The question at once arises as to where the Maccabaean author
+of <i>Daniel</i> could have got the name and personality of his Daniel.
+It is not probable that he could have invented both name and
+character. There is an allusion in the prophet Ezekiel (xiv. 14,
+20, xxviii. 3) to a Daniel whom he places as a great personality
+between Noah and Job. But this could not be our Daniel, whom
+Ezekiel, probably a man of ripe age at the time of the Babylonian
+deportation of the Jews, would hardly have mentioned in the same
+breath with two such characters, much less have put him <i>between</i>
+them, because, had the Daniel of the biblical book existed at this
+time, he would have been a mere boy, lacking any such distinction
+as to make him worthy of so high a mention. It is evident that
+Ezekiel considered his Daniel to be a celebrated ancient prophet,
+concerning whose date and origin, however, there is not a single
+trace to guide research. Hitzig&rsquo;s<a name="fa6f" id="fa6f" href="#ft6f"><span class="sp">6</span></a> conjecture that the Daniel of
+Ezekiel was Melchizedek is quite without foundation. The most
+that can be said in this connexion is that there may really have
+been a spiritual leader of the captive Jews who resided at Babylon
+and who was either named Daniel, perhaps after the unknown
+patriarch mentioned by Ezekiel, or to whom the same name had
+been given in the course of tradition by some historical confusion
+of persons. Following this hypothesis, it must be assumed that
+the fame of this Judaeo-Babylonian leader had been handed
+down through the unclear medium of oral tradition until the time
+of Antiochus Epiphanes, when some gifted Jewish author, feeling
+the need of producing a work which should console his people in
+their affliction under the persecutions of that monarch, seized
+upon the personality of the seer who lived during a time of persecution
+bearing many points of resemblance to that of Antiochus IV.,
+and moulded some of the legends than extant about the life
+and activity of this misty prophet into such a form as should be
+best suited to a didactic purpose.<a name="fa7f" id="fa7f" href="#ft7f"><span class="sp">7</span></a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page805" id="page805"></a>805</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Daniel, Book of.</span>&mdash;The Book of Daniel stands between Ezra
+and Esther in the third great division of the Hebrew Bible known
+as the <i>Hagiographa</i>, in which are classed all works which were
+not regarded as being part of the Law or the Prophets. The book
+presents the unusual peculiarity of being written in two languages,
+i.-ii. 4 and viii.-xii. being in Hebrew, while the text of ii. 4-vii.
+is the Palestinian dialect of Aramaic.<a name="fa8f" id="fa8f" href="#ft8f"><span class="sp">8</span></a> The subject matter,
+however, falls naturally into two divisions which are not co-terminous
+with the linguistic sections; viz. i.-vi. and vii.-xii. The
+first of these sense-divisions deals only with narratives regarding
+the reign of Nebuchadrezzar and his supposed son Belshazzar,
+while the second section consists exclusively of apocalyptic
+prophecies. There can be no doubt that a definite plan was
+followed in the arrangement of the work. The author&rsquo;s object
+was clearly to demonstrate to his readers the necessity of faith
+in Israel&rsquo;s God, who shall not for ever allow his chosen ones to
+be ground under the heel of a ruthless heathen oppressor. To
+illustrate this, he makes use on the one hand (i.-vi.) of carefully
+chosen narratives, somewhat loosely connected it is true, but all
+treating substantially the same subject,&mdash;the physical triumph
+of God&rsquo;s servant over his unbelieving enemies; and on the other
+hand (vii.-xii.), he introduces certain prophetic visions illustrative
+of God&rsquo;s favour towards the same servant, Daniel. So carefully
+is this record of the visions arranged that the first two chapters of
+the second part of the book (vii.-viii.) were no doubt purposely
+made to appear in a symbolic form, in order that in the last two
+revelations (xi.-xii.), which were couched in such direct language
+as to be intelligible even to the modern student of history, the
+author might obtain the effect of a climax. The book is probably
+not therefore a number of parts of different origin thrown loosely
+together by a careless editor, who does not deserve the title of
+author.<a name="fa9f" id="fa9f" href="#ft9f"><span class="sp">9</span></a> The more or less disconnected sections of the first part
+of the work were probably so arranged purposely, in order to
+facilitate its diffusion at a time when books were known to the
+people at large chiefly by being read aloud in public.</p>
+
+<p>Various attempts have been made to explain the sudden change
+from Hebrew to Aramaic in ii. 4. It was long thought, for
+example, that Aramaic was the vernacular of Babylonia and was
+consequently employed as the language of the parts relating to
+that country. But this was not the case, because the Babylonian
+language survived until a later date than that of the events
+portrayed in Daniel.<a name="fa10f" id="fa10f" href="#ft10f"><span class="sp">10</span></a> Nor is it possible to follow the theory of
+Merx, that Aramaic, which was the popular tongue of the day
+when the Book of Daniel was written, was therefore used for the
+simpler narrative style, while the more learned Hebrew was made
+the idiom of the philosophical portions.<a name="fa11f" id="fa11f" href="#ft11f"><span class="sp">11</span></a> The first chapter,
+which is just as much in the narrative style as are the following
+Aramaic sections, is in Hebrew, while the distinctly apocalyptic
+chapter vii. is in Aramaic. A third view, that the bilingual
+character of the work points to a time when both languages were
+used indifferently, is equally unsatisfactory,<a name="fa12f" id="fa12f" href="#ft12f"><span class="sp">12</span></a> because it is highly
+questionable whether two idioms can ever be used quite indifferently.
+In fact, a hybrid work in two languages would be a
+literary monstrosity. In view of the apparent unity of the entire
+work, the only possible explanation seems to be that the book
+was written at first all in Hebrew, but for the convenience of the
+general reader whose vernacular was Aramaic, a translation,
+possibly from the same pen as the original, was made into
+Aramaic. It must be supposed then that, certain parts of the
+original Hebrew manuscript being lost, the missing places were
+supplied from the current Aramaic translation.<a name="fa13f" id="fa13f" href="#ft13f"><span class="sp">13</span></a></p>
+
+<p>It cannot be denied in the light of modern historical research
+that if the Book of Daniel be regarded as pretending to full
+historical authority, the biblical record is open to all manner of
+attack. It is now the general opinion of most modern scholars
+who study the Old Testament from a critical point of view that
+this work cannot possibly have originated, according to the
+traditional theory, at any time during the Babylonian monarchy,
+when the events recorded are supposed to have taken place.</p>
+
+<p>The chief reasons for such a conclusion are as follows.<a name="fa14f" id="fa14f" href="#ft14f"><span class="sp">14</span></a></p>
+
+<p>1. The position of the book among the <i>Hagiographa</i>, instead of
+among the Prophetical works, seems to show that it was introduced
+after the closing of the Prophetical Canon. Some commentators
+have believed that Daniel was not an actual prophet in
+the proper sense, but only a seer, or else that he had no official
+standing as a prophet and that therefore the book was not
+entitled to a place among official prophetical books. But if the
+work had really been in existence at the time of the completion
+of the second part of the canon, the collectors of the prophetical
+writings, who in their care did not neglect even the parable of
+Jonah, would hardly have ignored the record of so great a
+prophet as Daniel is represented to have been.</p>
+
+<p>2. Jesus ben Sirach (Ecclesiasticus), who wrote about 200-180
+B.C., in his otherwise complete list of Israel&rsquo;s leading spirits
+(xlix.), makes no mention of Daniel. Hengstenberg&rsquo;s plea that
+Ezra and Mordecai were also left unmentioned has little force,
+because Ezra appears in the book bearing his name as nothing
+more than a prominent priest and scholar, while Daniel is represented
+as a great prophet.</p>
+
+<p>3. Had the Book of Daniel been extant and generally known
+after the time of Cyrus (537-529 B.C.), it would be natural to look
+for some traces of its power among the writings of Haggai,
+Zechariah and Malachi, whose works, however, show no evidence
+that either the name or the history of Daniel was known to these
+authors. Furthermore, the manner in which the prophets are
+looked back upon in ix. 6-10 cannot fail to suggest an extremely
+late origin for the book. Besides this, a careful study of ix. 2
+seems to indicate that the Prophetical Canon was definitely
+completed at the time when the author of Daniel wrote. It is also
+highly probable that much of the material in the second part of
+the book was suggested by the works of the later prophets,
+especially by Ezekiel and Zechariah.</p>
+
+<p>4. Some of the beliefs set forth in the second part of the book
+also practically preclude the possibility of the author having
+lived at the courts of Nebuchadrezzar and his successors. Most
+noticeable among these doctrines is the complete system of
+angelology consistently followed out in the Book of Daniel,
+according to which the management of human affairs is entrusted
+to a regular hierarchy of commanding angels, two of
+whom, Gabriel and Michael, are even mentioned by name. Such
+an idea was distinctly foreign to the primitive Israelitish conception
+of the indivisibility of Yahweh&rsquo;s power, and must consequently
+have been a borrowed one. It could certainly not have
+come from the Babylonians, however, whose system of attendant
+spirits was far from being so complete as that which is set forth
+in the Book of Daniel, but rather from Persian sources where
+a more complicated angelology had been developed. As many
+commentators have brought out, there can be little doubt that
+the doctrine of angels in Daniel is an indication of prolonged
+Persian influence. Furthermore, it is now very generally admitted
+that the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, which is
+advanced for the first time in the Old Testament in Daniel, also
+originated among the Persians,<a name="fa15f" id="fa15f" href="#ft15f"><span class="sp">15</span></a> and could only have been
+engrafted on the Jewish mind after a long period of intercourse
+with the Zoroastrian religion, which came into contact with the
+Jewish thinkers considerably after the time of Nebuchadrezzar.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page806" id="page806"></a>806</span></p>
+
+<p>5. All the above evidences are merely internal, but we are now
+able to draw upon the Babylonian historical sources to prove
+that Daniel could not have originated at the time of Nebuchadrezzar.
+There can be no doubt that the author of Daniel thought
+that Belshazzar (q.v.), who has now been identified beyond all
+question with <i>Bel-&#353;ar-uzur</i>, the son of Nabonidus, the last Semitic
+king of Babylon, was the son of Nebuchadrezzar, and that
+Belshazzar attained the rank of king.<a name="fa16f" id="fa16f" href="#ft16f"><span class="sp">16</span></a> This prince did not even
+come from the family of Nebuchadrezzar. Nabonidus, the father
+of Belshazzar, was the son of a nobleman <i>Nabu-baladsu-iqbi</i>, who
+was in all probability not related to any of the preceding kings of
+Babylon. Had Nabonidus been descended from Nebuchadrezzar
+he could hardly have failed in his records, which we possess, to
+have boasted of such a connexion with the greatest Babylonian
+monarch; yet in none of his inscriptions does he trace his descent
+beyond his father. Certain expositors have tried to obviate the
+difficulty, first by supposing that the expression &ldquo;son of
+Nebuchadrezzar&rdquo; in Daniel means &ldquo;descendant&rdquo; or &ldquo;son,&rdquo; a
+view which is rendered untenable by the facts just cited. This
+school has also endeavoured to prove that the author of Daniel
+did not mean to imply Belshazzar&rsquo;s kingship of Babylon at all by
+his use of the word &ldquo;king,&rdquo; but they suggest that the writer of
+Daniel believed Belshazzar to have been co-regent. If Belshazzar
+had ever held such a position, which is extremely unlikely in the
+absence of any evidence from the cuneiform documents, he would
+hardly have been given the unqualified title &ldquo;king of Babylon&rdquo;
+as occurs in Daniel.<a name="fa17f" id="fa17f" href="#ft17f"><span class="sp">17</span></a> For example, Cambyses, son of Cyrus, was
+undoubtedly co-regent and bore the title &ldquo;king of Babylon&rdquo;
+during his father&rsquo;s lifetime, but, in a contract which dates from the
+first year of Cambyses, it is expressly stated that Cyrus was still
+&ldquo;king of the lands.&rdquo; This should be contrasted with Dan.
+viii. 1, where reference is made to the &ldquo;third year of Belshazzar,
+king of Babylon&rdquo; without any allusion to another over-ruler.
+Such attempts are at best subterfuges to support an impossible
+theory regarding the origin of the Book of Daniel, whose author
+clearly believed in the kingship of Belshazzar and in that prince&rsquo;s
+descent from Nebuchadrezzar.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, the writer of Daniel asserts (v. 1) that a
+monarch &ldquo;Darius the Mede&rdquo; received the kingdom of Babylon
+after the fall of the native Babylonian house, although it is
+evident, from i. 21, x. 1, that the biblical author was perfectly
+aware of the existence of Cyrus.<a name="fa18f" id="fa18f" href="#ft18f"><span class="sp">18</span></a> The fact that in no other
+scriptural passage is mention made of any Median ruler between
+the last Semitic king of Babylon and Cyrus, and the absolute
+silence of the authoritative ancient authors regarding such a king,
+make it apparent that the late author of Daniel is again in error
+in this particular. It is known that Cyrus became master of
+Media by conquering Astyages, and that the troops of the king of
+Persia capturing Babylon took Nabonidus prisoner with but little
+difficulty. Unsuccessful attempts have been made to identify this
+mythical Darius with the Cyaxares, son of Astyages, of Xenophon&rsquo;s
+<i>Cyropaedia</i>, and also with the Darius of Eusebius, who was
+in all probability Darius Hystaspis. There is not only no room
+in history for this Median king of the Book of Daniel, but it is
+also highly likely that the interpolation of &ldquo;Darius the Mede&rdquo;
+was caused by a confusion of history, due both to the destruction
+of the Assyrian capital Nineveh by the Medes, sixty-eight years
+before the capture of Babylon by Cyrus, and also to the fame of
+the later king, Darius Hystaspis, a view which was advanced as
+early in the history of biblical criticism as the days of the Benedictine
+monk, Marianus Scotus. It is important to note in
+this connexion that Darius the Mede is represented as the son
+of Xerxes (Ahasuerus) and it is stated that he established
+120 satrapies. Darius <span class="correction" title="amended from Hystapis">Hystaspis</span> was the father of Xerxes, and
+according to Herodotus (iii. 89) established twenty satrapies.
+Darius the Mede entered into possession of Babylon after the
+death of Belshazzar; Darius Hystaspis conquered Babylon
+from the hands of certain rebels (Her. iii. 153-160). In fine, the
+interpolation of a Median Darius must be regarded as the most
+glaring historical inaccuracy of the author of Daniel. In fact,
+this error of the author alone is proof positive that he must have
+lived at a very late period, when the record of most of the earlier
+historical events had become hopelessly confused and perverted.</p>
+
+<p>With these chief reasons why the Book of Daniel cannot have
+originated in the Babylonian period, if the reader will turn more
+especially to the apocalyptic sections (vii.-xii.), it will be quite
+evident that the author is here giving a detailed account of
+historical events which may easily be recognized through the thin
+veil of prophetic mystery thrown lightly around them. It is
+indeed highly suggestive that just those occurrences which are
+the most remote from the assumed standpoint of the writer
+are the most correctly stated, while the nearer we approach the
+author&rsquo;s supposed time, the more inaccurate does he become.
+It is quite apparent that the predictions in the Book of Daniel
+centre on the period of Antiochus Epiphanes (175-164 B.C.), when
+that Syrian prince was endeavouring to suppress the worship
+of Yahweh and substitute for it the Greek religion.<a name="fa19f" id="fa19f" href="#ft19f"><span class="sp">19</span></a> There can
+be no doubt, for example, that in the &ldquo;Little Horn&rdquo; of vii. 8,
+viii. 9, and the &ldquo;wicked prince&rdquo; described in ix.-x., who is to
+work such evil among the saints, we have clearly one and the
+same person. It is now generally recognized that the king
+symbolized by the Little Horn, of whom it is said that he shall
+come of one of four kingdoms which shall be formed from the
+Greek empire after the death of its first king (Alexander), can be
+none other than Antiochus Epiphanes, and in like manner the
+references in ix. must allude to the same prince. It seems quite
+clear that xi. 21-45 refers to the evil deeds of Antiochus IV. and
+his attempts against the Jewish people and the worship of
+Yahweh. In xii. follows the promise of salvation from the same
+tyrant, and, strikingly enough, the predictions in this last section,
+x.-xii., relating to future events, become inaccurate as soon as
+the author finishes the section describing the reign of Antiochus
+Epiphanes. The general style of all these prophecies differs
+materially from that of all other prophetic writings in the Old
+Testament. Other prophets confine themselves to vague and
+general predictions, but the author of Daniel is strikingly
+particular as to detail in everything relating to the period in
+which he lived, i.e. the reign of Antiochus IV. Had the work
+been composed during the Babylonian era, it would be more
+natural to expect prophecies of the return of the exiled Jews to
+Palestine, as in Jeremiah, Ezekiel and Isaiah, rather than the
+acclamation of an ideal Messianic kingdom such as is emphasized
+in the second part of Daniel.</p>
+
+<p>As a specimen of the apocalyptic method followed in Daniel,
+the celebrated prophecy of the seventy weeks (ix. 24-27) may be
+cited, a full discussion of which will be found in Prince, <i>Daniel</i>
+157-161. According to Jer. xxv. 11-12, the period of Israel&rsquo;s
+probation and trial was to last seventy years. In the angelic
+explanation in Daniel of Jeremiah&rsquo;s prophecy, these years were
+in reality year-weeks, which indicated a period of 490 years. This
+is the true apocalyptic system. The author takes a genuine
+prophecy, undoubtedly intended by Jeremiah to refer simply to
+the duration of the Babylonian captivity, and, by means of a
+purely arbitrary and mystical interpretation, makes it denote the
+entire period of Israel&rsquo;s degradation down to his own time. This
+prophecy is really nothing more than an extension of the vision
+of the 2300 evening-mornings of viii. 14, and of the &ldquo;time, times
+and a half a time&rdquo; of vii. 25. The real problem is as to the
+beginning and end of this epoch, which is divided into three
+periods of uneven length; viz. one of seven weeks; one of sixty-two
+weeks; and the last of one week. It seems probable that the
+author of Daniel, like the Chronicler, began his period with the fall
+of Jerusalem in 586. His first seven weeks, therefore, ending with
+the rule of &ldquo;Messiah the Prince,&rdquo;<a name="fa20f" id="fa20f" href="#ft20f"><span class="sp">20</span></a> probably Joshua ben Jozadak,
+the first high-priest after the exile (Ezra iii. 2), seem to coincide exactly
+with the duration of the Babylon exile, i.e. forty-nine years.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page807" id="page807"></a>807</span></p>
+
+<p>The second period of the epoch, during which Jerusalem is to
+be peopled and built, and at the end of which the Messiah is to
+be cut off, is much more difficult to determine. The key to the
+problem lies undoubtedly in the last statement regarding the
+overthrow of the Messiah or Anointed One. Such a reference
+coming from a Maccabean author can only allude to the deposition
+by Antiochus IV. of the high-priest Onias III., which took
+place about 174 B.C., and the Syrian king&rsquo;s subsequent murder
+of the same person not later than 171 (2 Macc. iv. 33-36). The
+difficulty now arises that between 537 and 171 there are only 366
+years instead of the required number 434. It was evidently not
+the author&rsquo;s intention to begin the second period of sixty weeks
+simultaneously with the first period, as some expositors have
+thought, because the whole passage shows conclusively that he
+meant seventy independent weeks. Besides, nothing is gained
+by such a device, which would bring the year of the end of the
+second period down to the meaningless date 152, too late to refer
+to Onias. Cornill therefore adopted the only tenable theory
+regarding the problem; viz. that the author of Daniel did not
+know the chronology between 537 and 312, the establishment of
+the Seleucid era, and consequently made the period too long. A
+parallel case is the much quoted example of Demetrius, who
+placed the fall of Samaria (722 B.C.) 573 years before the succession
+of Ptolemy IV. (222), thus making an error of seventy-three
+years. Josephus, who places the reign of Cyrus forty to fifty
+years too early, makes a similar error.</p>
+
+<p>The last week is divided into two sections (26-27), in the first
+of which the city and sanctuary shall be destroyed and in the
+second the daily offering is to be suspended. All critical scholars
+recognize the identity of this second half-week with the &ldquo;time,
+times and a half a time&rdquo; of vii. 25. This last week must, therefore,
+end with the restoration of the temple worship in 164 B.C.</p>
+
+<p>This whole prophecy, which is perhaps the most interesting
+in the Book of Daniel, presents problems which can never be
+thoroughly understood, first because the author must have been
+ignorant of both history and chronology, and secondly, because,
+in his effort to be as mystical as possible, he purposely made use
+of indefinite and vague expressions which render the criticism of
+the passage a most unsatisfactory task.</p>
+
+<p>The Book of Daniel loses none of its beauty and force because
+we are bound, in the light of modern criticism, to consider it as
+a production of the reign of Antiochus Epiphanes, nor should
+conservative Bible-readers lament because the historical accuracy
+of the work is thus destroyed. The influence of the work was
+very great on the subsequent development of Christianity, but
+it was not the influence of the <i>history</i> contained in it which made
+itself felt, but rather of that sublime hope for a future deliverance
+of which the author of Daniel never lost sight. The allusion to
+the book by Jesus (Matt. xxiv. 15) shows merely that our Lord
+was referring to the work by its commonly accepted title, and
+implies no authoritative utterance with regard to its date or
+authorship. Our Lord simply made use of an apt quotation from
+a well-known work in order to illustrate and give additional force
+to his own prediction. If the book be properly understood, it
+must not only be admitted that the author made no pretence at
+accuracy of detail, but also that his prophecies were clearly intended
+to be merely an historical résumé, clothed for the sake of
+greater literary vividness in a prophetic garb. The work, which is
+certainly not a forgery, but only a consolatory political pamphlet,
+is just as powerful, viewed according to the author&rsquo;s evident
+intention, as a consolation to God&rsquo;s people in their dire distress
+at the time of Antiochus Epiphanes, as if it were, what an ancient
+but mistaken tradition had made it, really an accurate account of
+events which took place at the close of the Babylonian period.<a name="fa21f" id="fa21f" href="#ft21f"><span class="sp">21</span></a></p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Literature</span>.&mdash;See bibliography in Bevan, <i>Daniel</i> 9, and add
+Kamphausen, <i>Dan.</i>, in Haupt&rsquo;s <i>Sacred Books of the Old Testament</i>;
+Behrmann, <i>Dan.</i> (1894); J. D. Prince, <i>Dan.</i> (1899); G. A. Barton,
+&ldquo;The Compilation of the Book of Daniel,&rdquo; in <i>Journ. Bibl. Lit.</i>
+(1898), 62-86, against the unity of the book, &amp;c., &amp;c.; J. D. Davis,
+&ldquo;Persian Words and the Date of O.T. Documents,&rdquo; in <i>Old
+Testament and Semitic Studies: in Memory of W. R. Harper</i>
+(Chicago, 1908).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(J. D. Pr.)</div>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Additions to Daniel</span>.&mdash;The &ldquo;additions to Daniel&rdquo; are three
+in number: <i>Susannah and the Elders</i>, <i>Bel and the Dragon</i>, and
+<i>The Song of the Three Children</i>. Of these the two former have
+no organic connexion with the text. The case is otherwise with
+regard to the last. In some respects it helps to fill up a gap in the
+canonical text between verses 23 and 24 of chapter iii. And yet
+we find Polychronius, early in the 5th century, stating that this
+song was not found in the Syriac version.</p>
+
+<p><i>Susannah.</i>&mdash;This addition was placed by Theodotion before
+chap. i., and Bel and the Dragon at its close, whereas by the
+Septuagint and the Vulgate it was reckoned as chap. xiii. after
+the twelve canonical chapters, Bel and the Dragon as xiv.
+Theodotion&rsquo;s version is the source of the Peshitto and the Vulgate,
+for all three additions, and the Septuagint is the source of
+the Syro-Hexaplaric which has been published by Ceriani (<i>Mon.
+Sacr.</i> vii.). The legend recounts how that in the early days of the
+Captivity Susannah, the beautiful and pious wife of the rich
+Joakim, was walking in her garden and was there seen by two
+elders who were also judges. Inflamed with lust, they made
+infamous proposals to her, and when repulsed they brought
+against her a false charge of adultery. When brought before the
+tribunal she was condemned to death and was on the way to
+execution, when Daniel interposed and, by cross-questioning the
+accusers apart, convinced the people of the falsity of the charge.</p>
+
+<p>The source of the story may, according to Ewald (<i>Gesch.</i>³
+iv. 636), have been suggested by the Babylonian legend of the
+seduction of two old men by the goddess of love (see also Koran,
+<i>Sur.</i> ii. 96). Another and much more probable origin of the work
+is that given by Brüll (<i>Das apocr. Susanna-Buch</i>, 1877) and Ball
+(<i>Speaker&rsquo;s Apocr.</i> ii. 323-331). The first half of the story is based
+on a tradition&mdash;originating possibly in Jer. xxix. 21-32 and found
+in the Talmud and Midrash&mdash;of two elders Ahab and Zedekiah,
+who in the Captivity led certain women astray under the delusion
+that they should thereby become the mother of the Messiah.
+But the most interesting part of the investigation is concerned
+with the latter half of the story, which deals with the trial. The
+characteristics of this section point to its composition about 100-90
+B.C., when Simon ben Sheta&#7717; was president of the Sanhedrin.
+Its object was to support the attempts of the Pharisees to
+bring about a reform in the administration of the law courts.
+According to Sadducean principles the man who was convicted
+of falsely accusing another of a capital offence was not put to
+death unless his victim was already executed. The Pharisees held
+that the intention of the accusers was equivalent to murder. Our
+apocryph upholds the Pharisaic contention. As Simon ben Sheta&#7717;
+insisted on a rigorous examination of the witnesses, so does our
+writer: as he and his party required that the perjurer should suffer
+the same penalty he sought to inflict on another, so our writer
+represents the death penalty as inflicted on the perjured elders.</p>
+
+<p>The language was in all probability Semitic-Hebrew or
+Aramaic. The paronomasiae in the Greek in verses 54-55 (<span class="grk" title="hupo
+schinon ... schisei">&#8017;&#960;&#8056; &#963;&#967;&#8150;&#957;&#959;&#957; ... &#963;&#967;&#943;&#963;&#949;&#953;</span>) and 58-59 (<span class="grk" title="hupo prinon ... prisei">&#8017;&#960;&#8056; &#960;&#961;&#8150;&#957;&#959;&#957; ... &#960;&#961;&#943;&#963;&#949;&#953;</span>) present
+no cogent difficulty against this view; for they may be accidental
+and have arisen for the first time in the translation. But as Brüll
+and Ball have shown (see <i>Speaker&rsquo;s Apocr.</i> ii. 324), the same
+paronomasiae are possible either in Hebrew or Aramaic.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Literature</span>.&mdash;Ball in the <i>Speaker&rsquo;s Apocr.</i> ii. 233 sqq.; Schürer,
+<i>Gesch.</i>³ iii. 333; Rothstein in Kautzsch&rsquo;s <i>Apocr. u. Pseud.</i> i.
+176 sqq.; Kamphausen in <i>Ency. Bib.</i>; Marshall in Hastings&rsquo; <i>Bible
+Dict.</i>; Toy in the <i>Jewish Encyc.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Bel and the Dragon.</i>&mdash;We have here two independent narratives,
+in both of which Daniel appears as the destroyer of heathenism.
+The latter had a much wider circulation than the former, and is
+most probably a Judaized form of the old Semitic myth of the
+destruction of the old dragon, which represents primeval chaos
+(see Ball, <i>Speaker&rsquo;s Apocr.</i> ii. 346-348; Gunkel, <i>Schöpfung und
+Chaos</i>, 320-323). Marduk destroys Tiamat in a similar manner
+to that in which Daniel destroys the dragon (Delitzsch, <i>Das
+babylonische Weltschöpfung Epos</i>), by driving a storm-wind into
+the dragon which rends it asunder. Marshall (Hastings&rsquo; <i>Bib.
+Dict.</i> i. 267) suggests that the &ldquo;pitch&rdquo; of the Greek (Aramaic
+<span title="zifa">&#1494;&#1497;&#1508;&#1488;</span>) arose from the original term for storm-wind (<span title="zafa">&#1494;&#1506;&#1508;&#1488;</span>).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page808" id="page808"></a>808</span></p>
+
+<p>The Greek exists in two recensions, those of the Septuagint and
+Theodotion. Most scholars maintain a Greek original, but this is
+by no means certain. Marshall (Hastings&rsquo; <i>Bib Dict.</i> i. 268) argues
+for an Aramaic, and regards Gasters&rsquo;s Aramaic text [<i>Proceedings
+of the Society of Biblical Archaeology</i> (1894), pp. 280-290, 312-317;
+(1895) 75-94] as of primary value in this respect, but this is
+doubtful.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Literature.</span>&mdash;Fritzsche&rsquo;s <i>Handbuch zu den Apoc.</i>; Ball in the
+<i>Speaker&rsquo;s Apocr.</i> ii. 344 sqq.; Schürer,³ <i>Gesch.</i> iii. 332 sqq.; and
+the articles in the <i>Ency. Bibl., Bible Dict.</i>, and <i>Jewish Encyc.</i></p>
+
+<p>The Greek text is best given in Swete iii., and the Syriac will be
+found in Walton&rsquo;s <i>Polyglot</i>, Lagarde and Neubauer&rsquo;s <i>Tobit</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Song of the Three Children.</i>&mdash;This section is composed of the
+Prayer of Azariah and the Song of Azariah, Ananias and Misael,
+and was inserted after iii. 23 of the canonical text of Daniel.
+According to Fritzsche, König, Schürer, &amp;c., it was composed in
+Greek and added to the Greek translation. On the other hand,
+Delitzsch, Bissell, Ball, &amp;c., maintain a Hebrew original. The
+latter view has been recently supported by Rothstein, <i>Apocr. und
+Pseud.</i> i. 173-176, who holds that these additions were made to
+the text before its translation into Greek. These additions still
+preserve, according to Rothstein, a fragment of the original text,
+i.e. verses 23-28, which came between verses 23 and 24 of
+chapter iii. of the canonical text. They certainly fill up
+excellently a manifest gap in this text. &ldquo;The Song of the Three
+Children&rdquo; was first added after the verses just referred to, and
+subsequently the Prayer of Azariah was inserted before these
+verses.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Literature.</span>&mdash;Ball in the <i>Speaker&rsquo;s Apocr.</i> ii. 305 sqq.; Rothstein
+in Kautzsch&rsquo;s <i>Apocr. und Pseud.</i> i. 173 sqq.; Schürer,³ <i>Gesch.</i> iii.
+332 sqq.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(R. H. C.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1f" id="ft1f" href="#fa1f"><span class="fn">1</span></a> Four personages of the name of Daniel appear in the Old Testament:
+(1) the patriarch of Ezekiel (see above); (2) a son of David
+(1 Chron. iii. 1); (3) a Levite contemporary with Ezra (Ezra viii. 2;
+Neh. x. 6); (4) our Daniel.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2f" id="ft2f" href="#fa2f"><span class="fn">2</span></a> Ant. x. 10, 1.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3f" id="ft3f" href="#fa3f"><span class="fn">3</span></a> Chap, x., on the Prophets.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4f" id="ft4f" href="#fa4f"><span class="fn">4</span></a> Panarion, <i>adv.</i> Haeres. 55, 3.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5f" id="ft5f" href="#fa5f"><span class="fn">5</span></a> Prince, <i>Dan.</i> p. 26, n. 6.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6f" id="ft6f" href="#fa6f"><span class="fn">6</span></a> <i>Dan.</i> p. viii.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft7f" id="ft7f" href="#fa7f"><span class="fn">7</span></a> The account in chap. ii. of the promotion of Daniel to be governor
+of Babylon, as a reward for his correct interpretation of Nebuchadrezzar&rsquo;s
+dream, is very probably an imitation of the story of Joseph
+in Gen. xl-xli. The points of resemblance are very striking. In both
+accounts, we have a young Hebrew raised by the favour of a heathen
+king to great political prominence, owing to his extraordinary God-given
+ability to interpret dreams. In both versions, the heathen
+astrologers make the first attempt to solve the difficulty, which
+results in failure, whereupon the pious Israelite, being summoned to
+the royal presence, in both cases through the friendly intervention
+of a court official, triumphantly explains the mystery to the king&rsquo;s
+satisfaction (cf. Prince, <i>Dan.</i> p. 29).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft8f" id="ft8f" href="#fa8f"><span class="fn">8</span></a> See Bevan, <i>Dan.</i> 28-40, on the Hebrew and Aramaic of Daniel.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft9f" id="ft9f" href="#fa9f"><span class="fn">9</span></a> According to Lagarde, <i>Mitteilungen</i>, iv. 351 (1891); also Gött,
+<i>Gelehrte Anzeigen</i> (1891), 497-520.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft10f" id="ft10f" href="#fa10f"><span class="fn">10</span></a> The latest connected Babylonian inscription is that of
+Antiochus Soter (280-260 B.C.), but the language was probably
+spoken until Hellenic times; cf. Gutbrod, <i>Zeitschr. für Assyriol.</i>
+vi. 27.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft11f" id="ft11f" href="#fa11f"><span class="fn">11</span></a> Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 12.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft12f" id="ft12f" href="#fa12f"><span class="fn">12</span></a> Bertholdt, Dan. 15; Franz Delitzsch, in Herzog, <i>Realencyklopädie</i>,
+2nd ed., iii. 470.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft13f" id="ft13f" href="#fa13f"><span class="fn">13</span></a> Bevan, <i>Dan.</i> 27 ff.; Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 13.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft14f" id="ft14f" href="#fa14f"><span class="fn">14</span></a> For this whole discussion, see Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 15 ff.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft15f" id="ft15f" href="#fa15f"><span class="fn">15</span></a> The investigations of Haug, Spiegel and Windischmann show
+that this was a real Zoroastrian doctrine.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft16f" id="ft16f" href="#fa16f"><span class="fn">16</span></a> Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 35-42.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft17f" id="ft17f" href="#fa17f"><span class="fn">17</span></a> Certain tablets published by Strassmaier, bearing date continuously
+from Nabonidus to Cyrus, show that neither Belshazzar
+nor &ldquo;Darius the Mede&rdquo; could have had the title &ldquo;king of Babylon.&rdquo;
+See Driver, <i>Introduction</i>,³ xxii.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft18f" id="ft18f" href="#fa18f"><span class="fn">18</span></a> Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 44-56.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft19f" id="ft19f" href="#fa19f"><span class="fn">19</span></a> Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 19-20, 140, 155, 179 ff.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft20f" id="ft20f" href="#fa20f"><span class="fn">20</span></a> That &ldquo;Messiah&rdquo; or &ldquo;Anointed One&rdquo; was used of the High-Priest
+is seen from Lev. x, 3, v. 16.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft21f" id="ft21f" href="#fa21f"><span class="fn">21</span></a> Prince, <i>Dan.</i> 22-24.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANIEL<a name="ar105" id="ar105"></a></span> (<span class="sc">Danil</span>), of Kiev, the earliest Russian travel-writer,
+and one of the leading Russian travellers in the middle ages. He
+journeyed to Syria and other parts of the Levant about 1106-1107.
+He was the <i>igumen</i>, or abbot, of a monastery probably
+near Chernigov in Little Russia: some identify him with one
+Daniel, bishop of Suriev (fl. 1115-1122). He visited Palestine
+in the reign of Baldwin I., Latin king of Jerusalem (1100-1118),
+and apparently soon after the crusading capture of Acre (1104);
+he claims to have accompanied Baldwin, who treated him with
+marked friendliness, on an expedition against Damascus (<i>c.</i> 1107).
+Though Daniel&rsquo;s narrative, beginning (as it practically ends) at
+Constantinople, omits some of the most interesting sections of
+his journey, his work has considerable value. His picture of the
+Holy Land preserves a record of conditions (such as the Saracen
+raiding almost up to the walls of Christian Jerusalem, and the
+friendly relations subsisting between Roman and Eastern
+churches in Syria) peculiarly characteristic of the time; his
+account of Jerusalem itself is remarkably clear, minute and
+accurate; his three excursions&mdash;to the Dead Sea and Lower
+Jordan (which last he compares to a river of Little Russia, the
+Snov), to Bethlehem and Hebron, and towards Damascus&mdash;gave
+him an exceptional knowledge of certain regions. In spite
+of some extraordinary blunders in topography and history, his
+observant and detailed record, marked by evident good faith, is
+among the most valuable of medieval documents relating to
+Palestine: it is also important in the history of the Russian
+language, and in the study of ritual and liturgy (from its description
+of the Easter services in Jerusalem, the Descent of the Holy
+Fire, &amp;c.). Several Russian friends and companions, from Kiev
+and Old Novgorod, are recorded by Daniel as present with him at
+the Easter Eve &ldquo;miracle,&rdquo; in the church of the Holy Sepulchre.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>There are seventy-six MSS. of Daniel&rsquo;s Narrative, of which only
+five are anterior to A.D. 1500; the oldest is of 1475 (St Petersburg,
+Library of Ecclesiastical History 9/1086). Three editions exist, of
+which I. P. Sakharov&rsquo;s (St Petersburg, 1849) is perhaps the best
+known (in <i>Narratives of the Russian People</i>, vol. ii. bk. viii. pp.
+1-45). See also the French version in <i>Itinéraires russes en orient</i>, ed
+M<span class="sp">e</span> B. de Khitrovo (Geneva, 1889) (<i>Société de l&rsquo;orient latin</i>); and
+the account of Daniel in C. R. Beazley, <i>Dawn of Modern Geography</i>,
+ii. 155-174.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(C. R. B.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANIEL, GABRIEL<a name="ar106" id="ar106"></a></span> (1649-1728), French Jesuit historian, was
+born at Rouen on the 8th of February 1649. He was educated
+by the Jesuits, entered the order at the age of eighteen, and
+became superior at Paris. He is best known by his <i>Histoire de
+France depuis l&rsquo;établissement de la monarchie française</i> (first
+complete edition, 1713), which was republished in 1720, 1721,
+1725, 1742, and (the last edition, with notes by Father Griffet)
+1755-1760. Daniel published an abridgment in 1724 (English
+trans., 1726), and another abridgment was published by Dorival
+in 1751. Though full of prejudices which affect his accuracy,
+Daniel had the advantage of consulting valuable original sources.
+His <i>Histoire de la milice française</i>, &amp;c. (1721) is superior to his
+<i>Histoire de France</i>, and may still be consulted with advantage.
+Daniel also wrote a by no means successful reply to Pascal&rsquo;s
+<i>Provincial Letters</i>, entitled <i>Entretiens de Cléanthe et d&rsquo;Eudoxe sur
+les lettres provinciales</i> (1694); two treatises on the Cartesian
+theory as to the intelligence of the lower animals, and other
+works.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Sommervogel, <i>Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus</i>, t. ii.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANIEL, SAMUEL<a name="ar107" id="ar107"></a></span> (1562-1619), English poet and historian,
+was the son of a music-master, and was born near Taunton, in
+Somersetshire, in 1562. Another son, John Daniel, was a
+musician, who held some offices at court, and was the author of
+<i>Songs for the Lute, Viol and Voice</i> (1606). In 1579 Samuel was
+admitted a commoner of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, where he
+remained for about three years, and then gave himself up to the
+unrestrained study of poetry and philosophy. The name of
+Samuel Daniel is given as the servant of Lord Stafford, ambassador
+in France, in 1586, and probably refers to the poet. He
+was first encouraged and, if we may believe him, taught in verse,
+by the famous countess of Pembroke, whose honour he was
+never weary of proclaiming. He had entered her household as
+tutor to her son, William Herbert. His first known work, a
+translation of Paulus Jovius, to which some original matter is
+appended, was printed in 1585. His first known volume of verse
+is dated 1592; it contains the cycle of sonnets to <i>Delia</i> and the
+romance called <i>The Complaint of Rosamond</i>. Twenty-seven of
+the sonnets had already been printed at the end of Sir Philip
+Sidney&rsquo;s <i>Astrophel and Stella</i> without the author&rsquo;s consent.
+Several editions of <i>Delia</i> appeared in 1592, and they were very
+frequently reprinted during Daniel&rsquo;s lifetime. We learn by
+internal evidence that Delia lived on the banks of Shakespeare&rsquo;s
+river, the Avon, and that the sonnets to her were inspired by her
+memory when the poet was in Italy. To an edition of <i>Delia</i> and
+<i>Rosamond</i>, in 1594, was added the tragedy of <i>Cleopatra</i>, a severe
+study in the manner of the ancients, in alternately rhyming
+heroic verse, diversified by stiff choral interludes. <i>The First
+Four Books of the Civil Wars</i>, an historical poem in <i>ottava rima</i>,
+appeared in 1595. The bibliography of Daniel&rsquo;s works is attended
+with great difficulty, but as far as is known it was not until 1599
+that there was published a volume entitled <i>Poetical Essays</i>,
+which contained, besides the &ldquo;Civil Wars,&rdquo; &ldquo;Musophilus,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;A letter from Octavia to Marcus Antonius,&rdquo; poems in Daniel&rsquo;s
+finest and most mature manner. About this time he became
+tutor to Anne Clifford, daughter of the countess of Cumberland.
+On the death of Spenser, in the same year, Daniel received the
+somewhat vague office of poet-laureate, which he seems, however,
+to have shortly resigned in favour of Ben Jonson. Whether it
+was on this occasion is not known, but about this time, and at the
+recommendation of his brother-in-law, Giovanni Florio, he was
+taken into favour at court, and wrote a <i>Panegyric Congratulatorie
+offered to the King at Burleigh Harrington in Rutlandshire</i>, in
+<i>ottava rima</i>. In 1603 this poem was published, and in many cases
+copies contained in addition his <i>Poetical Epistles</i> to his patrons
+and an elegant prose essay called <i>A Defence of Rime</i> (originally
+printed in 1602) in answer to Thomas Campion&rsquo;s <i>Observations on
+the Art of English Poesie</i>, in which it was contended that rhyme
+was unsuited to the genius of the English language. In 1603,
+moreover, Daniel was appointed master of the queen&rsquo;s revels.
+In this capacity he brought out a series of masques and pastoral
+tragi-comedies,&mdash;of which were printed <i>A Vision of the Twelve
+Goddesses</i>, in 1604; <i>The Queen&rsquo;s Arcadia</i>, an adaptation of
+Guarini&rsquo;s <i>Pastor Fido</i>, in 1606; <i>Tethys Festival or the Queenes
+Wake</i>, written on the occasion of Prince Henry&rsquo;s becoming a
+Knight of the Bath, in 1610; and <i>Hymen&rsquo;s Triumph</i>, in honour
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page809" id="page809"></a>809</span>
+of Lord Roxburgh&rsquo;s marriage in 1615. Meanwhile had appeared,
+in 1605, <i>Certain Small Poems</i>, with the tragedy of <i>Philotas</i>;
+the latter was a study, in the same style as <i>Cleopatra</i>, written
+some five years earlier. This drama brought its author into
+difficulties, as Philotas, with whom he expressed some sympathy,
+was taken to represent Essex. In 1607, under the title
+of <i>Certaine small Workes heretofore divulged by Samuel Daniel</i>, the
+poet issued a revised version of all his works except <i>Delia</i> and
+the <i>Civil Wars</i>. In 1609 the Civil Wars had been completed
+in eight books. In 1612 Daniel published a prose <i>History of
+England</i>, from the earliest times down to the end of the reign
+of Edward III. This work afterwards continued, and published
+in 1617, was very popular with Drayton&rsquo;s contemporaries. The
+section dealing with William the Conqueror was published in
+1692 as being the work of Sir Walter Raleigh, apparently without
+sufficient grounds.</p>
+
+<p>Daniel was made a gentleman-extraordinary and groom of
+the chamber to Queen Anne, sinecure offices which offered no
+hindrance to an active literary career. He was now acknowledged
+as one of the first writers of the time. Shakespeare,
+Selden and Chapman are named among the few intimates who
+were permitted to intrude upon the seclusion of a garden-house
+in Old Street, St Luke&rsquo;s, where, Fuller tells us, he would &ldquo;lie
+hid for some months together, the more retiredly to enjoy the
+company of the Muses, and then would appear in public to converse
+with his friends.&rdquo; Late in life Daniel threw up his titular
+posts at court and retired to a farm called &ldquo;The Ridge,&rdquo; which
+he rented at Beckington, near Devizes in Wiltshire. Here he died
+on the 14th of October 1619.</p>
+
+<p>The poetical writings of Daniel are very numerous, but in spite
+of the eulogies of all the best critics, they were long neglected.
+This is the more singular since, during the 18th century, when so
+little Elizabethan literature was read, Daniel retained his poetical
+prestige. In later times Coleridge, Charles Lamb and others
+expended some of their most genial criticisms on this poet. Of
+his multifarious works the sonnets are now, perhaps, most read.
+They depart from the Italian sonnet form in closing with a
+couplet, as is the case with most of the sonnets of Surrey and
+Wyat, but they have a grace and tenderness all their own. Of a
+higher order is <i>The Complaint of Rosamond</i>, a soliloquy in which
+the ghost of the murdered woman appears and bewails her fate
+in stanzas of exquisite pathos. Among the <i>Epistles to Distinguished
+Persons</i> will be found some of Daniel&rsquo;s noblest stanzas
+and most polished verse. The epistle to Lucy, countess of Bedford,
+is remarkable among those as being composed in genuine <i>terza
+rima</i>, till then not used in English. Daniel was particularly
+fond of a four-lined stanza of solemn alternately rhyming
+iambics, a form of verse distinctly misplaced in his dramas.
+These, inspired it would seem by like attempts of the countess of
+Pembroke&rsquo;s, are hard and frigid; his pastorals are far more
+pleasing; and <i>Hymen&rsquo;s Triumph</i> is perhaps the best of all his
+dramatic writing. An extract from this masque is given in
+Lamb&rsquo;s <i>Dramatic Poets</i>, and it was highly praised by Coleridge.
+In elegiac verse he always excelled, but most of all in his touching
+address <i>To the Angel Spirit of the Most Excellent Sir Philip
+Sidney</i>. We must not neglect to quote <i>Musophilus</i> among the
+most characteristic writings of Daniel. It is a dialogue between
+a courtier and a man of letters, and is a general defence of learning,
+and in particular of poetic learning as an instrument in the
+education of the perfect courtier or man of action. It is addressed
+to Fulke Greville, and written, with much sententious melody,
+in a sort of <i>terza rima</i>, or, more properly, <i>ottava rima</i> with the
+couplet omitted. Daniel was a great reformer in verse, and the
+introducer of several valuable novelties. It may be broadly said
+of his style that it is full, easy and stately, without being very
+animated or splendid. It attains a high average of general
+excellence, and is content with level flights. As a gnomic writer
+Daniel approaches Chapman, but is far more musical and
+coherent. He is wanting in fire and passion, but he is preeminent
+in scholarly grace and tender, mournful reverie.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Daniel&rsquo;s works were edited by A. B. Grosart in 1885-1896.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(E. G.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANIELL, JOHN FREDERIC<a name="ar108" id="ar108"></a></span> (1700-1845), English chemist
+and physicist, was born in London on the 12th of March 1790,
+and in 1831 became the first professor of chemistry at the newly
+founded King&rsquo;s College, London. His name is best known for
+his invention of the Daniell cell (<i>Phil. Trans.</i>, 1836), still extensively
+used for telegraphic and other purposes. He also
+invented the dew-point hygrometer known by his name (<i>Quar.
+Journ. Sci.</i>, 1820), and a register pyrometer (<i>Phil. Trans.</i>, 1830);
+and in 1830 he erected in the hall of the Royal Society a water-barometer,
+with which he carried out a large number of observations
+<i>(Phil. Trans.</i>, 1832). A process devised by him for the
+manufacture of illuminating gas from turpentine and resin was
+in use in New York for a time. His publications include <i>Meteorological
+Essays</i> (1823), an <i>Essay on Artificial Climate considered in
+its Applications to Horticulture</i> (1824), which showed the necessity
+of a humid atmosphere in hothouses devoted to tropical plants,
+and an <i>Introduction to the Study of Chemical Philosophy</i> (1839).
+He died suddenly of apoplexy on the 13th of March 1845, in
+London, while attending a meeting of the council of the Royal
+Society, of which he became a fellow in 1813 and foreign secretary
+in 1839.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANIELL, THOMAS<a name="ar109" id="ar109"></a></span> (1749-1840), English landscape painter,
+was born at the Chertsey inn, kept by his father, in 1749, and
+apprenticed to an heraldic painter. Daniell, however, was animated
+with a love of the romantic and beautiful in architecture
+and nature. Up to 1784 he painted topographical subjects and
+flower pieces. By this time his two nephews (see below) had come
+under his influence, the younger, Samuel, being apprenticed to
+Medland the landscape engraver, and the elder, William, being
+under his own care. In this year (1784) he embarked for India
+accompanied by William, and found at Calcutta ample encouragement.
+Here he remained ten years, and on returning to London
+he published his largest work, <i>Oriental Scenery</i>, in six large
+volumes, not completed till 1808. From 1795 till 1828 he
+continued to exhibit Eastern subjects, temples, jungle hunts, &amp;c.,
+and at the same time continued the publication of illustrated
+works. These are&mdash;<i>Views of Calcutta</i>; <i>Oriental Scenery</i>, 144
+plates; <i>Views in Egypt</i>; <i>Excavations at Ellora</i>; <i>Picturesque
+Voyage to China</i>. These were for the most part executed in
+aquatint. He was elected an Academician in 1799, fellow of
+the Royal Society about the same time, and at different times
+member of several minor societies. His nephews both died before
+him; his Indian period had made him independent, and he lived
+a bachelor life in much respect at Kensington till his death on the
+19th of March 1840.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">William Daniell</span> (1769-1837), his nephew, was fourteen
+when he accompanied his uncle to India. His own publications,
+engraved in aquatint, were&mdash;<i>Voyage to India</i>; <i>Zoography</i>;
+<i>Animated Nature</i>; <i>Views of London</i>; <i>Views of Bootan</i>, a work
+prepared from his uncle&rsquo;s sketches; and a <i>Voyage Round Great
+Britain</i>, which occupied him several years. The British
+Institution made him an award of £100 for a &ldquo;Battle of
+Trafalgar,&rdquo; and he was elected R.A. in 1822. He turned to
+panorama painting before his death, beginning in 1832 with
+Madras, the picture being enlivened by a representation of the
+Hindu mode of taming wild elephants.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Samuel Daniell</span>, William&rsquo;s younger brother, was brought up
+as an engraver, and first appears as an exhibitor in 1792. A few
+years later he went to the Cape and travelled into the interior
+of Africa, with his sketching materials in his haversack. The
+drawings he made there were published, after his return, in his
+<i>African Scenery</i>. He did not rest long at home, but left for
+Ceylon in 1806, where he spent the remaining years of his life,
+publishing <i>The Scenery, Animals and Natives of Ceylon</i>.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANNAT, WILLIAM T.<a name="ar110" id="ar110"></a></span> (1853-&emsp;&emsp;), American artist, was
+born in New York city in 1853. He was a pupil of the Royal
+Academy of Munich and of Munkacsy, and became an accomplished
+draughtsman and a distinguished figure and portrait
+painter. He early attracted attention with sketches and pictures
+made in Spain, and a large composition, &ldquo;The Quartette,&rdquo; now
+in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, was one of the
+successes of the Paris Salon of 1884. Dannat settled in Paris,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page810" id="page810"></a>810</span>
+became an officer of the Legion of Honour, and is represented in
+the Luxembourg.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANNECKER, JOHANN HEINRICH VON<a name="ar111" id="ar111"></a></span> (1758-1841),
+German sculptor, was born at Stuttgart, where his father was
+employed in the stables of the duke of Württemberg, on the 15th
+of October 1758. The boy was entered in the military school at
+the age of thirteen, but after two years he was allowed to take his
+own taste for art. We find him at once associating with the
+young sculptors Scheffauer and Le Jeune, the painters Guibal and
+Harper, and also with Schiller, and the musician Zumsteeg. His
+busts of some of these are good; that of Schiller is well known.
+In his eighteenth year he carried off the prize at the Concours
+with his model of Milo of Crotona. On this the duke made him
+sculptor to the palace (1780), and for some time he was employed
+on child-angels and caryatides for the decoration of the reception
+rooms. In 1783 he left for Paris with Scheffauer, and placed
+himself under Pajou. His Mars, a sitting figure sent home to
+Stuttgart, marks this period; and we next find him, still travelling
+with his friend, at Rome in 1785, where he settled down to
+work hard for five years. Goethe and Herder were then in Rome
+and became his friends, as well as Canova, who was the hero of the
+day, and who had undoubtedly a great authoritative influence on
+his style. His marble statues of Ceres and Bacchus were done at
+this time. These are now in the Residenz-schloss, at Stuttgart.
+On his return to Stuttgart, which he never afterwards quitted
+except for short trips to Paris, Vienna and Zürich, the double
+influence of his admiration for Canova and his study of the antique
+is apparent in his works. The first was a girl lamenting her dead
+bird, which pretty light motive was much admired. Afterwards,
+Sappho, in marble for the Lustschloss, and two offering-bearers
+for the Jagdschloss; Hector, now in the museum, not in marble;
+the complaint of Ceres, from Schiller&rsquo;s poem; a statue of Christ,
+worthy of mention for its nobility, which has been skilfully
+engraved by Amsler; Psyche; kneeling water-nymph; Love,
+a favourite he had to repeat. These stock subjects with sculptors
+had freshness of treatment; and the Ariadne, done a little later,
+especially had a charm of novelty which has made it a European
+favourite in a reduced size. It was repeated for the banker Von
+Bethmann in Frankfort, and it now appears the ornament of the
+Bethmann Museum. Many of the illustrious men of the time
+were modelled by him. The original marble of Schiller is now at
+Weimar; after the poet&rsquo;s death it was again modelled in colossal
+size. Lavater, Metternich, Countess Stephanie of Baden,
+General Benkendorf and others are much prized. Dannecker
+was director of the Gallery of Stuttgart, and received many
+academic and other distinctions. His death in 1841 was preceded
+by a period of mental failure.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANNEWERK,<a name="ar112" id="ar112"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Danewerk</span> (Danish, <i>Dannevirke</i> or <i>Danevirke</i>,
+&ldquo;Danes&rsquo; rampart&rdquo;), the ancient frontier rampart of the
+Danes against the Germans, extending 10½ m. from just south of
+the town of Schleswig to the marshes of the river Trene near the
+village of Hollingstedt. The rampart was begun by Guðoðr
+(<i>Godefridus</i>), king of Vestfold, early in the 9th century. In 934
+it was passed by the German king Henry I., after which it was
+extended by King Harold Bluetooth (940-986), but was again
+stormed by the emperor Otto II. in 974. The chronicler Saxo
+Grammaticus mentions in his <i>Gesta Danorum</i> the &ldquo;rampart of
+Jutland&rdquo; (<i>Jutiae moenia</i>) as having been once more extended
+by Valdemar the Great (1157-1182), which has been cited among
+the proofs that Schleswig (<i>Sønderjylland</i>) forms an integral part of
+Jutland (<i>Manuel hist. de la question de Slesvig</i>, 1906). After the
+union of Schleswig and Holstein under the Danish crown, the
+Danevirke fell into decay, but in 1848 it was hastily strengthened
+by the Danes, who were, however, unable to hold it in face of the
+superiority of the Prussian artillery, and on the 23rd of April it
+was stormed. From 1850 onwards it was again repaired and
+strengthened at great cost, and was considered impregnable; but
+in the war of 1864 the Prussians turned it by crossing the Schlei,
+and it was abandoned by the Danes on the 6th of February
+without a blow. It was thereupon destroyed by the Prussians;
+in spite of which, however, a long line of imposing ruins still
+remains. The systematic excavation of these, begun in 1900, has
+yielded some notable finds, especially of valuable runic inscriptions
+(F. de Jessen, <i>La Question de Slesvig</i>, pp. 25, 44-50, &amp;c.).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Lorenzen, <i>Dannevirke og Omegn</i> (2nd ed., Copenhagen, 1864);
+H. Handelmann, <i>Das Dannewerk</i> (Kiel, 1885); Philippsen and
+Sünksen, <i>Führer durch das Danewerk</i> (Hamburg, 1903).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANSVILLE,<a name="ar113" id="ar113"></a></span> a village of Livingston county, New York,
+U.S.A., 49 m. S. of Rochester, on the Canaseraga Creek. Pop.
+(1890) 3758; (1900) 3633, of whom 417 were foreign-born;
+(1905) 3908; (1910) 3938. The village is served by the Delaware,
+Lackawanna &amp; Western, and the Dansville &amp; Mount Morris
+railways. At Dansville is the Jackson Health Resort, a large
+sanatorium, with which a nurses&rsquo; training school is connected.
+There is a public library. The village has large nurseries and
+vineyards, flour and paper mills, a large printing establishment,
+a foundry, and a shoe factory. Dansville, named in honour of
+Daniel P. Faulkner, was settled about 1800, and was incorporated
+in 1845.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANTE,<a name="ar114" id="ar114"></a></span> Dante (or Durante) Alighieri (1265-1321), the
+greatest of Italian poets, was born at Florence about the middle
+of May 1265. He was descended from an ancient family, but
+from one which at any rate for several generations had belonged
+to the burgher and not to the knightly class. His biographers
+have attempted on very slight grounds to deduce his origin from
+the Frangipani, one of the oldest senatorial families of Rome. We
+can affirm with greater certainty that he was connected with the
+Elisei who took part in the building of Florence under Charles
+the Great. Dante himself does not, with the exception of a
+few obscure and scattered allusions, carry his ancestry beyond
+the warrior Cacciaguida, whom he met in the sphere of Mars
+(<i>Par.</i> xv. 87, foll.). Of Cacciaguida&rsquo;s family nothing is known.
+The name, as he told Dante (<i>Par.</i> xv. 139, 5), was given him at
+his baptism; it has a Teutonic ring. The family may well have
+sprung from one of the barons who, as Villani tells us, remained
+behind Otto I. It has been noted that the phrase &ldquo;Tonde
+venner quivi&rdquo; (xvi. 44) seems to imply that they were not
+Florentines. He further tells his descendant that he was born in
+the year 1106 (or, if another reading of xvi, 37, 38 be adopted, in
+1091), and that he married an Aldighieri from the valley of the
+Po. Here the German strain appears unmistakably; the name
+Aldighiero (Aldiger) being purely Teutonic. He also mentions
+two brothers, Moronte and Eliseo, and that he accompanied the
+emperor Conrad III. upon his crusade into the Holy Land, where
+he died (1147) among the infidels. From Eliseo was probably
+descended the branch of the Elisei; from Aldighiero, son of
+Cacciaguida, the branch of the Alighieri. Bellincione, son of
+Aldighiero, was the grandfather of Dante. His father was a
+second Aldighiero, a lawyer of some reputation. By his first
+wife, Lapa di Chiarissimo Cialuffii, this Aldighiero had a son
+Francesco; by his second, Donna Bella, whose family name is
+not known, Dante and a daughter. Thus the family of Dante
+held a most respectable position among the citizens of his beloved
+city; but had it been reckoned in the very first rank they could
+not have remained in Florence after the defeat of the Guelphs at
+Montaperti in 1260. It is clear, however, that Dante&rsquo;s mother at
+least did so remain, for Dante was born in Florence in 1265. The
+heads of the Guelph party did not return till 1267.</p>
+
+<p>Dante was born under the sign of the twins, &ldquo;the glorious stars
+pregnant with virtue, to whom he owes his genius such as it
+is.&rdquo; Astrologers considered this constellation as favourable to
+literature and science, and Brunetto Latini, the philosopher and
+diplomatist, his instructor, tells him in the <i>Inferno</i> (xv. 25, foll.)
+that, if he follows its guidance, he cannot fail to reach the harbour
+of fame. Boccaccio relates that before his birth his mother
+dreamed that she lay under a very lofty laurel, growing in a green
+meadow, by a very clear fountain, when she felt the pangs of
+childbirth,&mdash;that her child, feeding on the berries which fell from
+the laurel, and on the waters of the fountain, in a very short time
+became a shepherd, and attempted to reach the leaves of the
+laurel, the fruit of which had nurtured him,&mdash;that, trying to
+obtain them he fell, and rose up, no longer a man, but in the guise
+of a peacock. We know little of Dante&rsquo;s boyhood except that
+he was a hard student and was profoundly influenced by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page811" id="page811"></a>811</span>
+Brunetto Latini. Boccaccio tells us that he became very familiar
+with Virgil, Horace, Ovid and Statius, and all other famous
+poets. From the age of eighteen he, like most cultivated young
+men of that age, wrote poetry assiduously, in the philosophical
+amatory style of which his friend, older by many years than himself,
+Guido Cavalcanti, was a great exponent, and of which Dante
+regarded Guido Guinicelli of Bologna as the master (<i>Purg.</i>
+xxvi. 97, 8). Leonardo Bruni of Arezzo, writing a hundred years
+or more after his death, says that &ldquo;by study of philosophy, of
+theology, astrology, arithmetic and geometry, by reading of
+history, by the turning over many curious books, watching and
+sweating in his studies, he acquired the science which he was to
+adorn and explain in his verses.&rdquo; Of Brunetto Latini Dante
+himself speaks with the most loving gratitude and affection,
+though he does not hesitate to brand his vices with infamy.
+Under such guidance Dante became master of all the science of his
+age at a time when it was not impossible to know all that could be
+known. He had some knowledge of drawing; at any rate he tells
+us that on the anniversary of the death of Beatrice he drew an
+angel on a tablet. He was an intimate friend of Giotto, who
+has immortalized his youthful lineaments in the chapel of the
+Bargello, and who is recorded to have drawn from his friend&rsquo;s
+inspiration the allegories of Virtue and Vice which fringe the
+frescoes of the Scrovegni Chapel at Padua. Nor was he less
+sensible to the delights of music. Milton had not a keener ear
+for the loud uplifted angel trumpets and the immortal harps of
+golden wires of the cherubim and seraphim; and the English
+poet was proud to compare his own friendship with Henry Lawes
+with that between Dante and Casella, &ldquo;met in the milder shades
+of purgatory.&rdquo; Of his companions the most intimate and
+sympathetic were the lawyer-poet Cino of Pistoia, Lapo Gianni,
+Guido Cavalcanti and others, similarly gifted and dowered
+with like tastes, who moved in the lively and acute society of
+Florence, and felt with him the first warm flush of the new spirit
+which was soon to pass over Europe. He has written no sweeter
+or more melodious lines than those in which he expresses the
+wish that he, with Guido and Lapo, might be wafted by enchantment
+over the sea wheresoever they might list, shielded from
+tempest and foul weather, in such contentment that they should
+wish to live always in one mind, and that the good enchanter
+should bring Monna Vanna and Monna Bice and that other lady
+into their barque, where they should for ever discourse of love
+and be for ever happy. It is a wonderful thing (says Leonardo
+Bruni) that, though he studied without intermission, it would
+not have appeared to anyone that he studied, from his joyous
+mien and youthful conversation. Like Milton he was trained in
+the strictest academical education which the age afforded; but
+Dante lived under a warmer sun and brighter skies, and found in
+the rich variety and gaiety of his early life a defence against the
+withering misfortunes of his later years. Milton felt too early the
+chill breath of Puritanism, and the serious musing on the experience
+of life, which saddened the verse of both poets, deepened in
+his case rather into grave and desponding melancholy, than into
+the fierce scorn and invective which disillusion wrung from Dante.</p>
+
+<p>We must now consider the political circumstances in which
+lay the activity of Dante&rsquo;s manhood. From 1115, the year of
+the death of Matilda countess of Tuscany, to 1215,
+Florence enjoyed a nearly uninterrupted peace.
+<span class="sidenote">Political life.</span>
+Attached to the Guelph party, it remained undivided
+against itself. But in 1215 a private feud between the families
+of Buondelmonte and Uberti introduced into the city the horrors
+of civil war. Villani (lib. v. cap. 38) relates how Buondelmonte
+de&rsquo; Buondelmonti, a noble youth of Florence, being engaged to
+marry a lady of the house of Amidei, allied himself instead to a
+Donati, and how Buondelmonte was attacked and killed by the
+Amidei and Uberti at the foot of the Ponte Vecchio, close by the
+pilaster which bears the image of Mars. &ldquo;The death of Messer
+Buondelmonte was the occasion and beginning of the accursed
+parties of Guelphs and Ghibellines in Florence.&rdquo; Of the seventy-two
+families then in Florence thirty-nine became Guelph under
+the leadership of the Buondelmonte and the rest Ghibelline
+under the Uberti. The strife of parties was for a while allayed
+by the war against Pisa in 1222, and the constant struggles
+against Siena; but in 1248 Frederick II. sent into the city his
+natural son Frederick &ldquo;of Antioch,&rdquo; with 1600 German knights.
+The Guelphs were driven away from the town, and took refuge,
+part in Montevarchi, part in Capraia. The Ghibellines, masters
+of Florence, behaved with great severity, and destroyed the
+towers and palaces of the Guelph nobles. At last the people
+became impatient. They rose in rebellion, reduced the powers of
+the podestà, elected a captain of the people to manage the internal
+affairs of the city, with a council of twelve, established a more
+democratic constitution, and, encouraged by the death of
+Frederick II. in December 1250, recalled the exiled Guelphs.
+Manfred, the bastard son of Frederick, pursued the policy of his
+father. He stimulated the Ghibelline Uberti to rebel against
+their position of subjection. A rising of the vanquished party
+was put down by the people, in July 1258 the Ghibellines were
+expelled from the town, and the towers of the Uberti razed to
+the ground. The exiles betook themselves to the friendly city
+of Siena. Manfred sent them a reinforcement of German horse,
+under his kinsman Count Giordano Lancia. The Florentines,
+after vainly demanding their surrender, despatched an army
+against them. On the 4th of September 1260 was fought the
+great battle of Montaperti, which dyed the Arbia red, and in
+which the Guelphs were entirely defeated. The hand which
+held the banner of the republic was sundered by the sword of
+a traitor (<i>Inf.</i> xxxii. 106). For the first time in the history of
+Florence the Carroccio was taken. Florence lay at the mercy of
+her enemies. A parliament was held at Empoli, in which the
+deputies of Siena, Pisa, Arezzo and other Tuscan towns consulted
+on the best means of securing their new war power. They voted
+that the accursed Guelph city should be blotted out. But
+Farinata degli Uberti stood up in their midst, bold and defiant
+as when he stood erect among the sepulchres of hell, and said that
+if, from the whole number of the Florentines, he alone should
+remain, he would not suffer, whilst he could wield a sword, that
+his country should be destroyed, and that, if it were necessary to
+die a thousand times for her, a thousand times would he be ready
+to encounter death. Help came to the Guelphs from an unexpected
+quarter. Clement IV., elected pope in 1265, offered the
+crown of Apulia and Sicily to Charles of Anjou. The French
+prince, passing rapidly through Lombardy, Romagna and the
+Marches, reached Rome by way of Spoleto, was crowned on
+the 6th of January 1266, and on the 23rd of February defeated
+and killed Manfred at Benevento. In such a storm of conflict
+did Dante first see the light. In 1267 the Guelphs were recalled,
+but instead of settling down in peace with their opponents they
+summoned Charles of Anjou to vengeance, and the Ghibellines
+were driven out. The meteor passage of Conradin gave hope to
+the imperial party, which was quenched when the head of the
+fair-haired boy fell on the scaffold at Naples. Pope after pope
+tried in vain to make peace. Gregory X. placed the rebellious
+city under an interdict; in 1278 Cardinal Latini by order of
+Nicholas III. effected a truce, which lasted for four years. The
+city was to be governed by a committee of fourteen <i>buonomini</i>,
+on which the Guelphs were to have a small majority. In 1282
+the constitution of Florence received the final form which it
+retained till the collapse of freedom. From the three arti
+<i>maggiori</i> were chosen six priors, in whose hands was placed the
+government of the republic. Before the end of the century,
+seven greater arts were recognized, including the <i>speziali</i>,&mdash;druggists
+and dealers in all manner of oriental goods, and in
+books&mdash;among whom Dante afterwards enrolled himself. They
+remained in office for two months, and during that time lived and
+shared a common table in the public palace. We shall see what
+influence this office had upon the fate of Dante. The success of
+the &ldquo;Sicilian Vespers&rdquo; (March 1282), the death of Charles of
+Anjou (January 1285), and of Martin IV. in the following March,
+roused again the courage of the Ghibellines. They entered
+Arezzo, where the Ghibellines at present had the upper hand, and
+threatened to drive out the Guelphs from Tuscany. Skirmishes
+and raids, of which Villani and Bruni have left accounts, went on
+through the winter of 1288-1289, forming a prelude to the great
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page812" id="page812"></a>812</span>
+battle of Campaldino in the following summer. Then it was
+that Dante saw &ldquo;horsemen moving camp and commencing the
+assault, and holding muster, and the march of foragers, the shock
+of tournaments, and race of jousts, now with trumpets and now
+with bells, with drums and castle signals, with native things and
+foreign&rdquo; (<i>Inf.</i> xxii. 1, foll.). On the 11th of June 1289, at Campaldino
+near Poppi, in the Casentino, the Ghibellines were utterly
+defeated. They never again recovered their hold on Florence,
+but the violence of faction survived under other names. In a
+letter quoted, though not at first hand, by Leonardo Bruni, which
+is not now extant, Dante is said to mention that he himself fought
+with distinction at Campaldino. He was present shortly afterwards
+at the battle of Caprona (<i>Inf.</i> xxi. 95, foll.), and returned in
+September 1289 to his studies and his love. His peace was of short
+duration. On the 9th of June 1290 died Beatrice, whose mortal
+love had guided him for thirteen years, and whose immortal spirit
+purified his later life, and revealed to him the mysteries of Paradise.</p>
+
+<p>Dante had first met Beatrice Portinari at the house of her
+father Folco on May-day 1274. In his own words, &ldquo;already nine
+times after my birth the heaven of light had returned as it were
+to the same point, when there appeared to my eyes the glorious
+lady of my mind, who was by many called Beatrice who knew not
+what to call her. She had already been so long in this life that
+already in its time the starry heaven had moved towards the east
+the twelfth part of a degree, so that she appeared to me about
+the beginning of her ninth year, and I saw her about the end of
+my ninth year. Her dress on that day was of a most noble
+colour, a subdued and goodly crimson, girdled and adorned in
+such sort as best suited with her tender age. At that moment I
+saw most truly that the spirit of life which hath its dwelling in
+the secretest chamber of the heart began to tremble so violently
+that the least pulses of my body shook therewith; and in
+<span class="correction" title="amended from trembing">trembling</span> it said these words, &lsquo;Ecce deus fortior me qui veniens
+dominabitur mihi.&rsquo;&rdquo; In the <i>Vita Nuova</i> is written the story of
+his passion from its commencement to within a year after the
+lady&rsquo;s death (June 9th, 1290). He saw Beatrice only once or
+twice, and she probably knew little of him. She married Simone
+de&rsquo; Bardi. But the worship of her lover was stronger for the
+remoteness of its subject. The last chapter of the Vita Nuova
+relates how, after the lapse of a year, &ldquo;it was given me to behold
+a wonderful vision, wherein I saw things which determined me
+to say nothing further of this blessed one until such time as I
+could discourse more worthily concerning her. And to this end
+I labour all I can, as she in truth knoweth. Therefore if it be His
+pleasure through whom is the life of all things that my life
+continue with me a few years, it is my hope that I shall yet write
+concerning her what hath not before been written of any woman.
+After the which may it seem good unto Him who is the master of
+grace that my spirit should go hence to behold the glory of its
+lady, to wit, of that blessed Beatrice who now gloriously gazes on
+the countenance of Him qui est per omnia saecula benedictus.&rdquo;
+In the <i>Convito</i> he resumes the story of his life. &ldquo;When I had lost
+the first delight of my soul (that is, Beatrice) I remained so pierced
+with sadness that no comforts availed me anything, yet after
+some time my mind, desirous of health, sought to return to the
+method by which other disconsolate ones had found consolation,
+and I set myself to read that little-known book of Boetius in
+which he consoled himself when a prisoner and an exile. And
+hearing that Tully had written another work, in which, treating
+of friendship, he had given words of consolation to Laelius, I set
+myself to read that also.&rdquo; He so far recovered from the shock of
+his loss that in 1292 he married Gemma, daughter of Manetto
+Donati, a connexion of the celebrated Corso Donati, afterwards
+Dante&rsquo;s bitter foe. It is possible that she is the lady mentioned
+in the <i>Vita Nuova</i> as sitting full of pity at her window and
+comforting Dante for his sorrow. By this wife he had two sons
+and two daughters, and although he never mentions her in the
+<i>Divina Commedia</i>, and although she did not accompany him into
+exile, there is no reason to suppose that she was other than a good
+wife, or that the union was otherwise than happy. Certain it is
+that he spares the memory of Corso in his great poem, and speaks
+kindly of his kinsmen Piccarda and Forese.</p>
+
+<p>In 1293 Giano della Bella, a man of old family who had thrown
+in his lot with the people, induced the commonwealth to adopt the
+so-called &ldquo;Ordinances of Justice,&rdquo; a severely democratic constitution,
+by which among other things it was enacted that no
+man of noble family, even though engaged in trade, could hold
+office as prior. Two years later Giano was banished, but the
+ordinances remained in force, though the <i>grandi</i> recovered much
+of their power.</p>
+
+<p>Dante now began to take an active part in politics. He was
+inscribed in the <i>arte</i> of the <i>Medici</i> and <i>Speziali</i>, which made him
+eligible as one of the six <i>priori</i> to whom the government of the
+city was entrusted in 1282. Documents still existing in the
+archives of Florence show that he took part in the deliberations
+of the several councils of the city in 1295, 1296, 1300 and 1301.
+The notice in the last year is of some importance. The pope
+had demanded a contingent of 100 Florentine knights to serve
+against his enemies, the Colonna family. On the 19th of June
+we read in the contemporary report of the debate on this
+question in the Council of a Hundred: &ldquo;<i>Dantes Alagherius
+consuluit quod de servitio faciendo Domino Papae nihil fieret</i>.&rdquo;
+Other instances of his invariable opposition to Boniface occur.
+Filelfo says that he served on fourteen embassies, a statement not
+only unsupported by evidence, but impossible in itself. Filelfo
+does not mention the only embassy in which we know for certain
+that Dante was engaged, that to the town of San Gemignano in
+May 1300. From the 15th of June to the 15th of August 1300
+he held the office of prior, which was the source of all the miseries
+of his life. The spirit of faction had again broken out in Florence.
+The two rival families were the Cerchi and the Donati,&mdash;the first
+of great wealth but recent origin, the last of ancient ancestry but
+poor. A quarrel had arisen in Pistoia between the two branches
+of the Cancellieri,&mdash;the Bianchi and Neri, the Whites and the
+Blacks. The quarrel spread to Florence, the Donati took the side
+of the Blacks, the Cerchi of the Whites. Pope Boniface was
+asked to mediate, and sent Cardinal Matteo d&rsquo;Acquasparta to
+maintain peace. He arrived just as Dante entered upon his
+office as prior. The cardinal effected nothing, but Dante and his
+colleagues banished the heads of the rival parties in different
+directions to a distance from the capital. The Blacks were sent to
+Città della Pieve in the Tuscan mountains; the Whites, among
+whom was Dante&rsquo;s dearest friend Guido Cavalcanti, to Serrezzano
+in the unhealthy Maremma. After the expiration of Dante&rsquo;s
+office both parties returned, Guido Cavalcanti so ill with fever
+that he shortly afterwards died. At a meeting held in the church
+of the Holy Trinity the Whites were denounced as Ghibellines,
+enemies of the pope. The Blacks sought for vengeance. Their
+leader, Corso Donati, hastened to Rome, and persuaded Boniface
+VIII. to send for Charles of Valois, brother of the French king,
+Philip the Fair, to act as &ldquo;peacemaker.&rdquo; The priors sent at
+the end of September four ambassadors to the pope, one of whom,
+according to the chronicler Dino, was Dante. There are, however,
+improbabilities in the story, and the passage quoted in
+support of it bears marks of later interpolation. He never again
+saw the towers of his native city. Charles of Valois, after visiting
+the pope at Anagni, retraced his steps to Florence, entering
+the city on All Saints&rsquo; Day and taking up his abode in the
+Oltr&rsquo; Arno. Corso Donati, who had been banished a second
+time, returned in force and summoned the Blacks to arms. The
+prisons were broken open, the podestà driven from the town, the
+Cerchi confined within their houses, a third of the city was
+destroyed with fire and sword. By the help of Charles the Blacks
+were victorious. They appointed Cante de&rsquo; Gabrielli of Gubbio
+as podestà, a man devoted to their interests. More than 600
+Whites were condemned to exile and cast as beggars upon the
+world. On the 27th of January 1302, Dante, with four others
+of the White party, was charged before the podestà, Cante
+de&rsquo; Gabrielli, with <i>baratteria</i>, or corrupt jobbery and peculation
+when in office, and, not appearing, condemned to pay a fine of
+5000 lire of small florins. If the money was not paid within
+three days their property was to be destroyed and laid waste;
+if they did pay the fine they were to be exiled for two years from
+Tuscany; in any case they were never again to hold office in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page813" id="page813"></a>813</span>
+republic. The charge in Dante&rsquo;s case was obviously preposterous,
+though ingeniously devised; for he was known to be at the time
+in somewhat straitened circumstances, and had recently been
+in control of certain public works. But of all sins, that of
+&ldquo;barratry&rdquo; was one of the most hateful to him. No doubt the
+papal finger may be traced in the affair. On the 10th of March
+Dante and fourteen others were condemned to be burned alive
+if they should come into the power of the republic. Similar
+sentences were passed in September 1311 and October 1315.
+The sentence was not formally reversed till 1494, under the
+government of the Medici.</p>
+
+<p>Leonardo Bruni, who accepts the story of the embassy to
+Rome, states that Dante received the news of his banishment in
+that city, and at once joined the other exiles at Siena. How he
+escaped arrest in the papal states is not explained. The exiles
+met first at Gargonza, a castle between Siena and Arezzo, and
+then at Arezzo itself. They joined themselves to the Ghibellines,
+to which party the podestà Uguccione della Faggiuola belonged.
+The Ghibellines, however, were divided amongst themselves, and
+the more strict Ghibellines were not disposed to favour the cause
+of the White Guelphs. On the 8th of June 1302, however, a
+meeting was held at San Godenzo, a place in the Florentine
+territory, Dante&rsquo;s presence at which is proved by documentary
+evidence, and an alliance was there made with the powerful
+Ghibelline clan of the Ubaldini. The exiles remained at Arezzo
+till the summer of 1304. In September 1303 the fleur-de-lis had
+entered Anagni, and Christ had a second time been made prisoner
+in the person of his vicar. At the instigation of Philip the Fair,
+William of Nogaret and Sciarra Colonna had entered the papal
+palace at Anagni, and had insulted and, it is said, even beaten
+the aged pontiff under his own roof. Boniface did not survive
+the insult long, but died in the following month. He was succeeded
+by Benedict XI., and in March the cardinal da Prato
+came to Florence, sent by the new pope to make peace. The
+people received him with enthusiasm; ambassadors came to him
+from the Whites; and he did his best to reconcile the two parties.
+But the Blacks resisted all his efforts. He shook the dust from
+off his feet, and departed, leaving the city under an interdict.
+Foiled by the calumnies and machinations of the one party,
+the cardinal gave his countenance to the other. It happened
+that Corso Donati and the heads of the Black party were absent
+at Pistoia. Da Prato advised the Whites to attack Florence,
+deprived of its heads and impaired by a recent fire. An army
+was collected of 16,000 foot and 9000 horse. Communications
+were opened with the Ghibellines of Bologna and Romagna, and
+a futile attempt was made to enter Florence from Lastra, the
+failure of which further disorganized the party. Dante had,
+however, already separated from the &ldquo;ill-conditioned and
+foolish company&rdquo; of common party-politicians, who rejected his
+counsels of wisdom, and had learnt that he must henceforth form
+a party by himself. In 1303 he had left Arezzo and gone to Forli
+in Romagna, of which city Scarpetta degli Ordelaffi was lord.
+To him, according to Flavius Blondus the historian (d. before
+1484), a native of the place, Dante acted for a time as secretary.</p>
+
+<p>From Forli Dante probably went to Bartolommeo della Scala,
+lord of Verona, where the country of the great Lombard gave him
+his first refuge and his first hospitable reception. Can
+Grande, to whom he afterwards dedicated the <i>Paradiso</i>,
+<span class="sidenote">Dante&rsquo;s Ghibellinism.</span>
+was then a boy. Bartolommeo died in 1304, and it is
+possible that Dante may have remained in Verona till
+his death. We must consider, if we would understand the real
+nature of Dante&rsquo;s Ghibellinism, that he had been born and
+bred a Guelph; but he saw that the conditions of the time were
+altered, and that other dangers menaced the welfare of his
+country. There was no fear now that Florence, Siena, Pisa,
+Arezzo should be razed to the ground in order that the castle of
+the lord might overlook the humble cottages of his contented
+subjects; but there was danger lest Italy should be torn in
+sunder by its own jealousies and passions, and lest the fair
+domain bounded by the sea and the Alps should never properly
+assert the force of its individuality, and should present a contemptible
+contrast to a united France and a confederated
+Germany. Sick with petty quarrels and dissensions, Dante
+strained his eyes towards the hills for the appearance of a
+universal monarch, raised above the jars of faction and the spur of
+ambition, under whom each country, each city, each man, might,
+under the institutions best suited to it, lead the life and do the
+work for which it was best fitted. United in spiritual harmony
+with the vicar of Christ, he should show for the first time to the
+world an example of a government where the strongest force and
+the highest wisdom were interpenetrated by all that God had
+given to the world of piety and justice. In this sense and in no
+other was Dante a Ghibelline. The vision was never realized&mdash;the
+hope was never fulfilled. Not till 500 years later did
+Italy become united and the &ldquo;greyhound of deliverance&rdquo;
+chase from city to city the wolf of cupidity. But is it possible
+to say that the dream did not work its own realization, or to
+deny that the high ideal of the poet, after inspiring a few minds
+as lofty as his own, has become embodied in the constitution of
+a state which acknowledges no stronger bond of union than a
+common worship of the exile&rsquo;s indignant and impassioned verse?</p>
+
+<p>It is very difficult to determine with exactness the order and
+the place of Dante&rsquo;s wanderings. Many cities and castles in Italy
+have claimed the honour of giving him shelter, or of
+being for a time the home of his inspired muse. He
+<span class="sidenote">Wanderings.</span>
+certainly spent some time with Count Guido Salvatico
+in the Casentino near the sources of the Arno, probably in the
+castle of Porciano, and with Uguccione in the castle of Faggiuola
+in the mountains of Urbino. After this he is said to have visited
+the university of Bologna; and in August 1306 we find him at
+Padua. Cardinal Napoleon Orsini, the legate of the French pope
+Clement V., had put Bologna under a ban, dissolved the university
+and driven the professors to the northern city. In May or June
+1307 the same cardinal collected the Whites at Arezzo and tried
+to induce the Florentines to recall them. The name of Dante is
+found attached to a document signed by the Whites in the church
+of St Gaudenzio in the Mugello. This enterprise came to nothing.
+Dante retired to the castle of Moroello Malespina in the Lunigiana,
+where the marble ridges of the mountains of Carrara descend
+in precipitous slopes to the Gulf of Spezzia. From this time till
+the arrival of the emperor Henry VII. in Italy, October 1310, all
+is uncertain. His old enemy Corso Donati had at last allied
+himself with Uguccione della Faggiuola, the leader of the
+Ghibellines. Dante thought it possible that this might lead to
+his return. But in 1308 Corso was declared a traitor, attacked
+in his house, put to flight and killed. Dante lost his last hope.
+He left Tuscany, and went to Can Grande della Scala at Verona.
+From this place it is thought that he visited the university of
+Paris (1309), studied in the rue du Fouarre and went on into
+the Low Countries. That he ever crossed the Channel or went to
+Oxford, or himself saw where the heart of Henry, son of Richard,
+earl of Cornwall, murdered by his cousin Guy of Montfort in
+1271, was &ldquo;still venerated on the Thames,&rdquo; may safely be disbelieved.
+The only evidence for it is in the <i>Commentary</i> of John
+of Serravalle, bishop of Fermo, who lived a century later, had no
+special opportunity of knowing, and was writing for the benefit
+of two English bishops. The election in 1308 of Henry of Luxemburg
+as emperor stirred again his hopes of a deliverer. At the end
+of 1310, in a letter to the princes and people of Italy, he proclaimed
+the coming of the saviour; at Milan he did personal
+homage to his sovereign. The Florentines made every preparation
+to resist the emperor. Dante wrote from the Casentino a letter
+dated the 31st of March 1311, in which he rebuked them for their
+stubbornness and obstinacy. Henry still lingered in Lombardy
+at the siege of Cremona, when Dante, on the 16th of April 1311,
+in a celebrated epistle, upbraided his delay, argued that the
+crown of Italy was to be won on the Arno rather than on the Po,
+and urged the tarrying emperor to hew the rebellious Florentines
+like Agag in pieces before the Lord. Henry was as deaf to this
+exhortation as the Florentines themselves. After reducing
+Lombardy he passed from Genoa to Pisa, and on the 29th of June
+1312 was crowned by some cardinals in the church of St John
+Lateran at Rome; the Vatican being in the hands of his adversary
+King Robert of Naples. Then at length he moved towards
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page814" id="page814"></a>814</span>
+Tuscany by way of Umbria. Leaving Cortona and Arezzo, he
+reached Florence on the 19th of September. He did not dare to
+attack it, but returned in November to Pisa. In the summer of
+the following year he prepared to invade the kingdom of Naples;
+but in the neighbourhood of Siena he caught a fever and died at
+the monastery of Buonconvento, on the 24th of August 1313.
+He lies in the Campo Santo of Pisa; and the hopes of Dante and
+his party were buried in his grave.</p>
+
+<p>After the death of the emperor Henry (Bruni tells us) Dante
+passed the rest of his life as an exile, sojourning in various places
+throughout Lombardy, Tuscany and the Romagna,
+under the protection of various lords, until at length
+<span class="sidenote">Old age and death.</span>
+he retired to Ravenna, where he ended his life. Very
+little can be added to this meagre story. There is reason for
+supposing that he stayed at Gubbio with Bosone dei Rafaelli, and
+tradition assigns him a cell in the monastery of Sta Croce di Fonte
+Avellana in the same district, situated on the slopes of Catria,
+one of the highest peaks of the Apennines in that region.
+After the death of the French pope, Clement V., he addressed a
+letter, dated the 14th of July 1314, to the cardinals in conclave,
+urging them to elect an Italian pope. About this time he came
+to Lucca, then lately conquered by his friend Uguccione. Here he
+completed the last cantos of the <i>Purgatory</i>, which he dedicated
+to Uguccione, and here he must have become acquainted with
+Gentucca, whose name had been whispered to him by her countryman
+on the slopes of the Mountain of Purification (<i>Purg.</i> xxiv.
+37). That the intimacy between the &ldquo;world-worn&rdquo; poet and
+the young married lady (who is thought to be identifiable with
+Gentucca Morla, wife of one Cosciorino Fondora) was other than
+blameless, is quite incredible. In August 1315 was fought the
+battle of Monte Catini, a day of humiliation and mourning for
+the Guelphs. Uguccione made but little use of his victory; and
+the Florentines marked their vengeance on his adviser by condemning
+Dante yet once again to death if he ever should come
+into their power. In the beginning of the following year Uguccione
+lost both his cities of Pisa and Lucca. At this time Dante
+was offered an opportunity of returning to Florence. The conditions
+given to the exiles were that they should pay a fine and
+walk in the dress of humiliation to the church of St John, and
+there do penance for their offences. Dante refused to tolerate
+this shame; and the letter is still extant in which he declines to
+enter Florence except with honour, secure that the means of life
+will not fail him, and that in any corner of the world he will be
+able to gaze at the sun and the stars, and meditate on the sweetest
+truths of philosophy. He preferred to take refuge with his most
+illustrious protector Can Grande della Scala of Verona, then a
+young man of twenty-five, rich, liberal and the favoured head
+of the Ghibelline party. His name has been immortalized by an
+eloquent panegyric in the seventeenth canto of the <i>Paradiso</i>.
+Whilst on a visit at the court of Verona he maintained, on the
+20th of January 1320, the philosophical thesis <i>De aqua et terra</i>,
+on the levels of land and water, which is included in his minor
+works. The last three years of his life were spent at Ravenna,
+under the protection of Guido da Polenta. In his service Dante
+undertook an embassy to the Venetians. He failed in the object
+of his mission, and, returning disheartened and broken in spirit
+through the unhealthy lagoons, caught a fever and died in
+Ravenna on the 14th of September 1321. His bones still repose
+there. His doom of exile has been reversed by the union of Italy,
+which has made the city of his birth and the various cities of his
+wanderings component members of a common country. His son
+Piero, who wrote a commentary on the <i>Divina Commedia</i>, settled
+as a lawyer in Verona, and died in 1364. His daughter Beatrice
+lived as a nun in Ravenna, dying at some time between 1350
+(when Boccaccio brought her a present of ten gold crowns from a
+Florentine gild) and 1370. His direct line became extinct in 1509.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dante&rsquo;s Works.</i>&mdash;Of Dante&rsquo;s works, that by which he is known
+to all the educated world, and in virtue of which he holds his
+place as one of the half-dozen greatest writers of all
+time, is of course the <i>Commedia</i>. (The epithet <i>divina</i>,
+<span class="sidenote">Divina Commedia.</span>
+it may be noted, was not given to the poem by its
+author, nor does it appear on a title-page until 1555, in the
+edition of Ludovico Dolce, printed by Giolito; though it is
+applied to the poet himself as early as 1512.) The poem is
+absolutely unique in literature; it may safely be said that at no
+other epoch of the world&rsquo;s history could such a work have been
+produced. Dante was steeped in all the learning, which in its
+way was considerable, of his time; he had read the <i>Summa
+Theologica</i> of Aquinas, the <i>Trésor</i> of his master Brunetto, and
+other encyclopaedic works available in that age; he was familiar
+with all that was then known of the Latin classical and post-classical
+authors. Further, he was a deep and original political
+thinker, who had himself borne a prominent part in practical
+politics. He was born into a generation in which almost every
+man of education habitually wrote verse, as indeed their predecessors
+had been doing for the last fifty years. Vernacular
+poetry had come late into Italy, and had hitherto, save for a few
+didactic or devotional treatises hitched into rough rhyme, been
+exclusively lyric in form. Amatory at first, later, chiefly in the
+hands of Guittone of Arezzo and Guido Cavalcanti, taking an
+ethical and metaphysical tone, it had never fully shaken off the
+Provençal influence under which it had started, and of which
+Dante himself shows considerable traces.</p>
+
+<p>The age also was unique, though the two great events which
+made the 15th century a turning-point in the world&rsquo;s history&mdash;the
+invention of printing and the discovery of the new world (to
+which might perhaps be added the intrusion of Islam into Europe)&mdash;were
+still far in the future. But the age was essentially one of
+great men; of free thought and free speech; of brilliant and
+daring action, whether for good or evil. It is easy to understand
+how Dante&rsquo;s bitterest scorn is reserved for those &ldquo;sorry souls
+who lived without infamy and without renown, displeasing to
+God and to His enemies.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The time was thus propitious for the production of a great
+imaginative work, and the man was ready who should produce it.
+It called for a prophet, and the prophet said, &ldquo;Here am I.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Dante,&rdquo; says an acute writer, &ldquo;is not, as Homer is, the father
+of poetry springing in the freshness and simplicity of childhood
+out of the arms of mother earth; he is rather, like Noah, the
+father of a second poetical world, to whom he pours forth his
+prophetic song fraught with the wisdom and the experience of the
+old world.&rdquo; Thus the <i>Commedia</i>, though often classed for want
+of a better description among epic poems, is totally different in
+method and construction from all other poems of that kind. Its
+&ldquo;hero&rdquo; is the narrator himself; the incidents do not modify the
+course of the story; the place of episodes is taken by theological
+or metaphysical disquisitions; the world through which the poet
+takes his readers is peopled, not with characters of heroic story,
+but with men and women known personally or by repute to him
+and those for whom he wrote. Its aim is not to delight, but to
+reprove, to rebuke, to exhort; to form men&rsquo;s characters by
+teaching them what courses of life will meet with reward, what
+with penalty, hereafter; &ldquo;to put into verse,&rdquo; as the poet says,
+&ldquo;things difficult to think.&rdquo; For such new matter a new vehicle
+was needed. We have Bembo&rsquo;s authority for believing that the
+<i>terza rima</i>, surpassed, if at all, only by the ancient hexameter, as
+a measure equally adaptable to sustained narrative, to debate,
+to fierce invective, to clear-cut picture and to trenchant epigram,
+was first employed by Dante.</p>
+
+<p>The action of the <i>Commedia</i> opens in the early morning of the
+Thursday before Easter, in the year 1300. The poet finds himself
+lost in a forest, escaping from which he has his way barred by a
+wolf, a lion and a leopard. All this, like the rest of the poem, is
+highly symbolical. This branch of the subject is too vast to be
+entered on at any length here; but so far as this passage is concerned
+it may be said that it seems to indicate that at this period
+of his life, about the age of thirty-five, Dante went through some
+experience akin to what is now called &ldquo;conversion.&rdquo; Having led
+up till then the ordinary life of a cultivated Florentine of good
+family; taking his part in public affairs, military and civil, as an
+hereditary member of the predominant Guelph party; dallying
+in prose which with all its beauty and passion is full of the
+conceits familiar to the 13th century, and in verse which save for
+the excellence of its execution differs in no way from that of his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page815" id="page815"></a>815</span>
+predecessors, with the memory of his lost love; studying more
+seriously, perhaps, than most of his associates; possibly travelling
+a little,&mdash;gradually or suddenly he became convinced that all
+was not well with him, and that not by leading, however blamelessly,
+the &ldquo;active&rdquo; life could he save his soul. The strong vein of
+mysticism, found in so many of the deepest thinkers of that age,
+and conspicuous in Dante&rsquo;s mind, no doubt played its part. His
+efforts to free himself from the &ldquo;forest&rdquo; of worldly cares were
+impeded by the temptations of the world&mdash;cupidity (including
+ambition), the pride of life and the lusts of the flesh, symbolized
+by the three beasts. But a helper is at hand. Virgil appears and
+explains that he has a commission from three ladies on high to
+guide him. The ladies are the Blessed Virgin, St Lucy (whom for
+some reason never yet explained Dante seems to have regarded
+as in a special sense his protector) and Beatrice. In Virgil we
+are apparently intended to see the symbol of what Dante calls
+philosophy, what we should rather call natural religion; Beatrice
+standing for theology, or rather revealed religion. Under Virgil&rsquo;s
+escort Dante is led through the two lower realms of the next
+world, Hell and Purgatory; meeting on the way with many
+persons illustrious or notorious in recent or remoter times, as well
+as many well enough known then in Tuscany and the neighbouring
+states; but who, without the immortality, often unenviable,
+that the poet has conferred on them, would long ago have
+been forgotten. Popes, kings, emperors, poets and warriors,
+Florentine citizens of all degrees, are there found; some doomed
+to hopeless punishment, others expiating their offences in milder
+torments, and looking forward to deliverance in due time. It is
+remarkable to notice how rarely, if ever, Dante allows political
+sympathy or antagonism to influence him in his distribution of
+judgment. Hell is conceived as a vast conical hollow, reaching to
+the centre of the earth. It has three great divisions, corresponding
+to Aristotle&rsquo;s three classes of vices, incontinence, brutishness
+and malice. The first are outside the walls of the city of Dis;
+the second, among whom are included unbelievers, tyrants,
+suicides, unnatural offenders, usurers, are within; the first
+apparently on the same level as those without, the rest separated
+from them by a steep descent of broken rocks. (It should be said
+that many Dante scholars hold that Aristotle&rsquo;s &ldquo;brutishness&rdquo; has
+no place in Dante&rsquo;s scheme; but the symmetry of the arrangement,
+the special reference made to that division, and certain
+expressions used elsewhere by Dante, seem to make it probable
+that he would here, as in most other cases, have followed his
+master in philosophy.) The sinners by malice, which includes all
+forms of fraud or treachery, are divided from the last by a yet
+more formidable barrier. They lie at the bottom of a pit, the
+depth of which is not stated, with vertical sides, and accessible
+only by supernatural means; a monster named Geryon bearing
+the poets down on his back. The torments here are of a more
+terrible, often of a loathsome character. Ignominy is added to
+pain, and the nature of Dante&rsquo;s demeanour towards the sinners
+changes from pity to hatred. At the very bottom of the pit is
+Lucifer, immovably fixed in ice; climbing down his limbs they
+reach the centre of the earth, whence a cranny conducts them
+back to the surface, at the foot of the purgatorial mountain,
+which they reach as Easter Day is dawning. Before the actual
+Purgatory is attained they have to climb for the latter half of the
+day and rest at night. The occupants of this outer region are
+those who have delayed repentance till death was upon them.
+They include many of the most famous men of the last thirty
+years. In the morning the gate is opened, and Purgatory proper
+is entered. This is divided into seven terraces, corresponding to
+the seven deadly sins, which encircle the mountain and have
+to be reached by a series of steep climbs, compared by Dante in
+one instance to the path from Florence to Samminiato. The
+penalties are not degrading, but rather tests of patience or
+endurance; and in several cases Dante has to bear a share in
+them as he passes. On the summit is the Earthly Paradise.
+Here Beatrice appears, in a mystical pageant; Virgil departs,
+leaving Dante in her charge. By her he is led through the
+various spheres of which, according to both the astronomy and
+the theology of the time, Heaven is composed, to the supreme
+Heaven, or Empyrean, the seat of the Godhead. For one
+moment there is granted him the intuitive vision of the Deity,
+and the comprehension of all mysteries, which is the ultimate
+goal of mystical theology; his will is wholly blended with that of
+God, and the poem ends.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Convito</i>, or <i>Banquet</i>, also called <i>Convivio</i> (Bembo uses the
+first form, Trissino the other), is the work of Dante&rsquo;s manhood,
+as the <i>Vita Nuova</i> is the work of his youth. It consists,
+in the form in which it has come down to us, of an
+<span class="sidenote">Convito.</span>
+introduction and three treatises, each forming an elaborate
+commentary in a long canzone. It was intended, if completed,
+to have comprised commentaries on eleven more canzoni,
+making fourteen in all, and in this shape would have formed a
+<i>tesoro</i> or handbook of universal knowledge, such as Brunetto
+Latini and others have left to us. It is perhaps the least well
+known of Dante&rsquo;s Italian works, but crabbed and unattractive
+as it is in many parts, it is well worth reading, and contains
+many passages of great beauty and elevation. Indeed a knowledge
+of it is quite indispensable to the full understanding of the <i>Divina
+Commedia</i> and the <i>De Monarchia</i>. The time of its composition is
+uncertain. As it stands it has very much the look of being the
+contents of note-books partially arranged. Dante mentions princes
+as living who died in 1309; he does not mention Henry VII. as
+emperor, who succeeded in 1310. There are some passages which
+seem to have been inserted at a later date. The canzoni upon
+which the commentary is written were probably composed between
+1292 and 1300, when he was seeking in philosophy consolation
+for the loss of Beatrice. The <i>Convito</i> was first printed in Florence
+by Buonaccorsi in 1490. It has never been adequately edited.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Vita Nuova</i> (<i>Young Life</i> or <i>New Life</i>, for both significations
+seem to be intended) contains the history of his love for Beatrice.
+He describes how he met Beatrice as a child, himself a
+child, how he often sought her glance, how she once
+<span class="sidenote">Vita Nuova.</span>
+greeted him in the street, how he feigned a false love
+to hide his true love, how he fell ill and saw in a dream the death
+and transfiguration of his beloved, how she died, and how his
+health failed from sorrow, how the tender compassion of another
+lady nearly won his heart from its first affection, how Beatrice
+appeared to him in a vision and reclaimed his heart, and how at
+last he saw a vision which induced him to devote himself to study
+that he might be more fit to glorify her who gazes on the face of
+God for ever. This simple story is interspersed with sonnets,
+ballads and canzoni, arranged with a remarkable symmetry, to
+which Professor Charles Eliot Norton was the first to draw
+attention, chiefly written at the time to emphasize some mood of
+his changing passion. After each of these, in nearly every case,
+follows an explanation in prose, which is intended to make the
+thought and argument intelligible to those to whom the language
+of poetry was not familiar. The whole has a somewhat artificial
+air, in spite of its undoubted beauty; showing that Dante
+was still under the influence of the <i>Dugentisti</i>, many of whose
+conceits he reproduces. The book was probably completed by
+1300. It was first printed by Sermartelli in Florence, 1576.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the smaller poems contained in the <i>Vita Nuova</i> and
+<i>Convito</i> there are a considerable number of canzoni, ballate and
+sonnetti bearing the poet&rsquo;s name. Of these many
+undoubtedly are genuine, others as undoubtedly
+<span class="sidenote">Canzoniere.</span>
+spurious. Some which have been preserved under the
+name of Dante belong to Dante de Maiano, a poet of a harsher
+style; others which bear the name of Aldighiero are referable
+to Dante&rsquo;s sons Jacopo or Pietro, or to his grandsons; others may
+be ascribed to Dante&rsquo;s contemporaries and predecessors Cino
+da Pistoia and others. Those which are genuine secure Dante
+a place among lyrical poets scarcely if at all inferior to that of
+Petrarch. Most of these were printed in <i>Sonetti e canzoni</i>
+(Giunta, 1527). The best edition of the <i>Canzoniere</i> of Dante is
+that by Fraticelli published by Barbéra at Florence. His collection
+includes seventy-eight genuine poems, eight doubtful and
+fifty-four spurious. To these are added an Italian paraphrase of
+the seven penitential psalms in <i>terza rima</i>, and a similar paraphrase
+of the Credo, the seven sacraments, the ten commandments, the
+Lord&rsquo;s Prayer and the Ave Maria.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page816" id="page816"></a>816</span></p>
+
+<p>The Latin treatise <i>De monarchia</i>, in three books, contains the
+mature statement of Dante&rsquo;s political ideas. In it he propounds
+the theory that the supremacy of the emperor is derived
+from the supremacy of the Roman people over the
+<span class="sidenote">De monarchia.</span>
+world, which was given to them direct from God. As
+the emperor is intended to assure their earthly happiness, so
+does their spiritual welfare depend upon the pope, to whom the
+emperor is to do honour as to the first-born of the Father. The
+date of its publication is almost universally admitted to be the
+time of the descent of Henry VII. into Italy, between 1310 and
+1313, although its composition may have been in hand from a
+much earlier period. The book was first printed by Oporinus
+at Basel in 1559, and placed on the Index of forbidden books.</p>
+
+<p>The treatise <i>De vulgari eloquentia</i>, in two books, also in Latin,
+is mentioned in the <i>Convito</i>. Its object was first to establish the
+Italian language as a literary tongue, and to distinguish
+the noble or &ldquo;courtly&rdquo; speech which might become the
+<span class="sidenote">De vulgari eloquentia.</span>
+property of the whole nation, at once a bond of internal
+unity and a line of demarcation against external
+nations, from the local dialects peculiar to different districts;
+and secondly, to lay down rules for poetical composition in the
+language so established. The work was intended to be in four
+books, but only two are extant. The first of these deals with the
+language, the second with the style and with the composition of
+the canzone. The third was probably intended to continue this
+subject, and the fourth was destined to the laws of the ballata and
+sonetto. It contains much acute criticism of poetry and poetic
+diction. This work was first published in the Italian translation
+of Trissino at Vicenza in 1529. The original Latin was not published
+till 1577 at Paris by Jacopo Corbinelli, one of the Italians
+who were brought from Florence by Catherine de&rsquo; Medici, from
+a MS. now preserved at Grenoble. The work was probably left
+unfinished in consequence of Dante&rsquo;s death.</p>
+
+<p>Boccaccio mentions in his life of Dante that he wrote two
+eclogues in Latin in answer to Johannes de Virgilio, who invited
+him to come from Ravenna to Bologna and compose
+a great work in the Latin language. The most interesting
+<span class="sidenote">Eclogues.</span>
+passage in the work is that in the first poem, where he expresses
+his hope that when he has finished the three parts of his great
+poem his grey hairs may be crowned with laurel on the banks of
+the Arno. Although the Latin of these poems is superior to that
+of his prose works, we may feel thankful that Dante composed
+the great work of his life in his own vernacular. The versification,
+however, is good, and there are pleasant touches of gentle humour.
+The <i>Eclogues</i> have been edited by Messrs Wicksteed and Gardiner
+(<i>Dante and Giovanni del Virgilio</i>, London, 1902).</p>
+
+<p>A treatise <i>De aqua et terra</i> has come down to us, which Dante
+tells us was delivered at Mantua in January 1320 (perhaps 1321)
+as a solution of the question which was being at that
+time much discussed&mdash;whether in any place on the
+<span class="sidenote">De aqua et terra.</span>
+earth&rsquo;s surface water is higher than the earth. It was
+first published at Venice in 1508, by an ecclesiastic named
+Moncetti, from a MS. which he alleged to be in his possession, but
+which no one seems to have seen. Its genuineness is accordingly
+very doubtful; but Dr Moore has from internal evidence made
+out a very strong case for it.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Letters</i> of Dante are among the most important materials
+for his biography. Giovanni Villani mentions three as specially
+remarkable&mdash;one to the government of Florence, in
+which he complains of undeserved exile; another to
+<span class="sidenote">Letters.</span>
+the emperor Henry VII., when he lingered too long at the siege
+of Brescia; and a third to the Italian cardinals to urge them to
+the election of an Italian pope after the death of Clement V.
+The first of these letters has not come down to us, the two last are
+extant. Besides these we have one addressed to the cardinal da
+Prato, one to a Florentine friend refusing the base conditions of
+return from exile, one to the princes and lords of Italy to prepare
+them for the coming of Henry of Luxembourg, another to the
+Florentines reproaching them with the rejection of the emperor,
+and a long letter to Can Grande della Scala, containing directions
+for interpreting the <i>Divina Commedia</i>, with especial reference to
+the <i>Paradiso</i>. Of less importance are the letters to the nephews
+of Count Alessandro da Romena, to the marquis Moroello
+Malespina, to Cino da Pistoia and to Guido da Polenta. The
+genuineness of all the letters has at one time or another been
+impugned; but the more important are now generally accepted.
+They have been translated by Mr C. S. Latham, ed. by Mr G. R.
+Carpenter (Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, 1891).</p>
+
+<p>Dante&rsquo;s reputation has passed through many vicissitudes, and
+much trouble has been spent by critics in comparing him with
+other poets of established fame. Read and commented upon
+with more admiration than intelligence in the Italian universities
+in the generation immediately succeeding his death, his name
+became obscured as the sun of the Renaissance rose higher
+towards its meridian. In the 16th century he was held inferior
+to Petrarch; in the 17th and first half of the 18th he was almost
+universally neglected. His fame is now fully vindicated. Translations
+and commentaries issue from every press in Europe and
+America, and many studies for separate points are appearing
+every year.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;It would be impossible here to give anything like
+a complete account even of the editions of Dante&rsquo;s works; still more
+of the books which have been written to elucidate the <i>Commedia</i>
+as a whole, or particular points in it. The section &ldquo;Dante&rdquo; in the
+British Museum catalogue down to 1887 occupies twenty-nine folio
+pages; the supplement, to 1900, as many more. The catalogue of
+the Fiske collection, in Cornell University library, is in two quarto
+volumes and covers 606 pages. A few of the more important editions
+and of the more valuable commentaries and aids may, however, be
+recorded.</p>
+
+<p><i>Editions.</i>&mdash;The <i>Commedia</i> was first printed by John Numeister
+at Foligno, in April 1472. Two other editions followed in the same
+year: one at Jesi (<i>Federicus Veronensis</i>), and Mantua (<i>Georgius et
+Paulus Teutonici</i>). These, together with a Naples edition of about
+1477 (Francesco del Tuppo), were included by Lord Vernon in
+<i>Le Prime Quattro Edizioni</i> (1858). Another Neapolitan edition, without
+printer&rsquo;s name, is dated 1477, and in the same year Wendelin of
+Spires published the first Venetian edition. Milan followed in 1478
+with that known from the name of its editor as the <i>Nidobeatine</i>. In
+1481 appeared the first Florentine edition (<i>Nicolo and Lorenzo della
+Magna</i>) with the commentary of Cristoforo Landino, and a series of
+copper engravings ascribed to Baccio Baldini, varying in number in
+different copies from two to twenty; a sumptuous and very carelessly
+printed volume. Venice supplied most of the editions for many
+years to come. Altogether twelve existed by the end of the century.
+In 1502 Aldus produced the first &ldquo;pocket&rdquo; edition in his new
+&ldquo;italic&rdquo; type, probably cut from the handwriting of his friend
+Bembo. A second edition of this is dated 1515. The firm of Giunta at
+Florence printed the poem in a small volume with cuts, in 1506; and
+for the rest of the 16th century edition follows edition, to the number
+of about thirty in all. The most noteworthy commentaries are
+those of Alessandro Vellutello (Venice, 1544), and Bernardo Daniello
+(Venice, 1568), both of Lucca. The Cruscan Academicians edited
+the text in 1595. The first edition with woodcuts is that of Boninus
+de Boninis (Brescia, 1487). Bernardino Benali followed at Venice
+in 1491, and from that time onward few if any of the folio editions are
+without them. The 17th century produced three (or perhaps four)
+small, shabby and inaccurate editions. In 1716 a revival of interest
+in Dante had set in, and before 1800 some score of editions had appeared,
+the best-known being those of G. A. Volpi (Padua, 1727),
+Pompeo Venturi (Venice, 1739) and Baldassare Lombardi (Rome,
+1791).</p>
+
+<p><i>Commentaries.</i>&mdash;The <i>Commedia</i> began to be the subject of commentaries
+as soon as, if not before, the author was in his grave. One
+known as the <i>Anonimo</i> until in 1881 Dr Moore identified its writer
+as Graziole de&rsquo; Bambaglioli, was in course of writing in 1324. It was
+published by Lord Vernon, to whose munificence we owe the accessibility
+of most of the earlier commentaries, in 1848. That of Jacopo
+della Lana is thought to have been composed before 1340. It was
+printed in the Venice and Milan editions of 1477, and 1478 respectively.
+The so-called <i>Ottimo Comento</i> (Pisa, 1837) is of about the
+same date. It embodies parts of Lana&rsquo;s, but is largely an independent
+work. Witte ascribes it to Andrea della Lancia, a Florentine notary.
+Dante&rsquo;s sons Pietro and Jacopo also commented on their father&rsquo;s
+poem. Their works were published, again at Lord Vernon&rsquo;s expense,
+in 1845 and 1848. Boccaccio&rsquo;s lectures on the <i>Commedia</i>, cut short
+at <i>Inf.</i> xvii. 17 by his death in 1375, are accessible in various forms.
+His work was achieved by his disciple Benvenuto Rambaldi of Imola
+(d. <i>c.</i> 1390). Benvenuto&rsquo;s commentary, written in Latin, genial in
+temper, and often acute, was popular from the first. Extracts from
+it were used as notes in many MSS. Much of it was printed by
+Muratori in his <i>Antiquitates Italicae</i>; but the entire work was first
+published in 1887 by Mr William Warren Vernon, with the aid of Sir
+James Lacaita. No greater boon has ever been offered to students
+of Dante. Another early annotator who must not be overlooked is
+Francesco da Buti of Pisa, who lectured in that city towards the close
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page817" id="page817"></a>817</span>
+of the same century. His commentary, which served as the basis
+of Landino&rsquo;s already mentioned, was first printed in Pisa in 1858.
+One more commentary deserves mention. During the council of
+Constance, John of Serravalle, bishop of Fermo, fell in with the
+English bishops Robert Hallam and Nicholas Bubwith, and at their
+request compiled a voluminous exposition of the <i>Commedia</i>. This
+remained in MS. till recently, when it was printed in a costly form.</p>
+
+<p><i>Translations.</i>&mdash;Probably the first complete translation of Dante
+into a modern language was the Castilian version of Villena (1428).
+In the following year Andreu Febrer produced a rendering into
+Catalan verse. In 1515 Villegas published the <i>Inferno</i> in Spanish.
+The earliest French version is that of B. Grangier (1597). Chaucer
+has rendered several passages beautifully, and similar fragments are
+embedded in Milton and others. But the first attempt to reproduce
+any considerable portion of the poem was made by Rogers, who only
+completed the <i>Inferno</i> (1782). The entire poem appeared first in
+English in the version of Henry Boyd (1802) in six-line stanzas; but
+the first adequate rendering is the admirable blank verse of H. F.
+Cary (1814, 2nd ed. 1819), which has remained the standard translation,
+though others of merit, notably those of Pollock (1854) and
+Longfellow (1867) in blank verse, Plumptre (1887) and Haselfoot
+(1887) in <i>terza rima</i>; J. A. Carlyle (<i>Inferno</i> only, 1847). C. E. Norton
+(1891), and H. F. Tozer (1904), in prose, have since appeared. The
+best in German are those of &ldquo;Philalethes&rdquo; (the late King John of
+Saxony) and Witte, both in blank verse.</p>
+
+<p><i>Modern Editions and Commentaries.</i>&mdash;The first serious attempt to
+establish an accurate text in recent times was made by Carl Witte,
+whose edition (1862) has been subsequently used as the basis for the
+text of the <i>Commedia</i> in the Oxford edition of Dante&rsquo;s complete
+works (1896 and later issues). Dr Toynbee&rsquo;s text (1900) follows the
+Oxford, with some modifications. The notes of Cary, Longfellow,
+Witte and &ldquo;Philalethes,&rdquo; appended to their several translations,
+and Tozer&rsquo;s, in an independent volume, are valuable. Scartazzini&rsquo;s
+commentary is the most voluminous that has appeared since the
+15th century. With a good deal of superfluous, and some superficial,
+erudition, it cannot be neglected by any one who wishes to study the
+poem thoroughly. An edition by A.J. Butler contains a prose version
+and notes. Of modern Italian editions, Bianchi&rsquo;s and Fraticelli&rsquo;s are
+still as good as any.</p>
+
+<p><i>Other Aids.</i>&mdash;For beginners no introduction is equal to the essay
+on Dante by the late Dean Church. Maria Rossetti&rsquo;s <i>Shadow of
+Dante</i> is also useful. <i>A Study of Dante</i>, by J. A. Symonds, is
+interesting. More advanced students will find Dr Toynbee&rsquo;s <i>Dante
+Dictionary</i> indispensable, and Dr E. Moore&rsquo;s <i>Studies in Dante</i> of great
+service in its discussion of difficult places. Two concordances, to the
+<i>Commedia</i> by Dr Fay (Cambridge, Mass., 1888), and to the minor
+works by Messrs Sheldon and White (Oxford, 1905), are due to
+American scholars. Mr W. W. Vernon&rsquo;s <i>Readings in Dante</i> have
+profited many students. Dante&rsquo;s minor works still lack thorough
+editing and scholarly elucidation, with the exception of the <i>De
+vulgari eloquentia</i>, which has been well handled by Professor Pio
+Rajna (1896), and the <i>Vita Nuova</i> by F. Beck (1896) and Barbi
+(1907). Good translations of the latter by D. G. Rossetti and C. E.
+Norton, and of the <i>De monarchia</i> by F. C. Church and P. H. Wicksteed
+are in existence. The best text is that of the Oxford <i>Dante</i>, though
+much confessedly remains to be done. The dates of their original
+publication have already been given.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;The first attempt at a bibliography of editions
+of Dante was made in Pasquali&rsquo;s edition of his collected works
+(Venice, 1739); but the first really adequate work on the subject is
+that of the viscount Colomb de Batines (1846-1848). A supplement
+by Dr Guido Biagi appeared in 1888. Julius Petzholdt had already
+covered some of the same ground in <i>Bibliographia Dantea</i>, extending
+from 1865 to 1880. The period from 1891 to 1900 has been dealt
+with by SS. Passerini and Mazzi in <i>Un Decennio di bibliografia
+Dantesca</i> (1905). The catalogues of the two libraries already named,
+and that of Harvard University, are worth consulting. For the
+MSS. Dr E. Moore&rsquo;s <i>Textual Criticism</i> (1889) is the most complete
+guide.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(A. J. B.*)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANTON, GEORGE JACQUES<a name="ar115" id="ar115"></a></span> (1759-1794), one of the most
+conspicuous actors in the decisive episodes of the French Revolution,
+was born at Arcis-sur-Aube on the 26th of October 1759.
+His family was of respectable quality, though of very moderate
+means. They contrived to give him a good education, and he
+was launched in the career of an advocate at the Paris bar.
+When the Revolution broke out, it found Danton following his
+profession with apparent success, leading a cheerful domestic life,
+and nourishing his intelligence on good books. He first appears
+in the revolutionary story as president of the popular club or
+assembly of the district in which he lived. This was the famous
+club of the Cordeliers, so called from the circumstance that its
+meetings were held in the old convent of the order of the
+Cordeliers, just as the Jacobins derived their name from the
+refectory of the convent of the Jacobin brothers. It is an odd
+coincidence that the old rivalries of Dominicans and Franciscans
+in the democratic movement inside the Catholic Church should
+be recalled by the names of the two factions in the democratic
+movement of a later century away from the church. The
+Cordeliers were from the first the centre of the popular principle
+in the French Revolution carried to its extreme point; they were
+the earliest to suspect the court of being irreconcilably hostile to
+freedom; and it was they who most vehemently proclaimed the
+need for root-and-branch measures. Danton&rsquo;s robust, energetic
+and impetuous temperament made him the natural leader in such
+a quarter. We find no traces of his activity in the two great
+insurrectionary events of 1789&mdash;the fall of the Bastille, and the
+forcible removal of the court from Versailles to the Tuileries.
+In the spring of 1790 we hear his voice urging the people to prevent
+the arrest of Marat. In the autumn we find him chosen to
+be the commander of the battalion of the national guard of his
+district. In the beginning of 1791 he was elected to the post of
+administrator of the department of Paris. This interval was for
+all France a barren period of doubt, fatigue, partial reaction and
+hoping against hope. It was not until 1792 that Danton came
+into the prominence of a great revolutionary chief.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of the previous year (1791) Mirabeau had died,
+and with him had passed away the only man who was at all likely
+to prove a wise guide to the court. In June of that year the king
+and queen made a disastrous attempt to flee from their capital and
+their people. They were brought back once more to the Tuileries,
+which from that time forth they rightly looked upon more as a
+prison than a palace or a home. The popular exasperation was
+intense, and the constitutional leaders, of whom the foremost was
+Lafayette, became alarmed and lost their judgment. A bloody
+dispersion of a popular gathering, known afterwards as the
+massacre of the Champ-de-Mars (July 1791), kindled a flame of
+resentment against the court and the constitutional party which
+was never extinguished. The Constituent Assembly completed
+its infertile labours in September 1791. Then the elections took
+place to its successor, the short-lived Legislative Assembly.
+Danton was not elected to it, and his party was at this time only
+strong enough to procure for him a very subordinate post in the
+government of the Parisian municipality. Events, however,
+rapidly prepared a situation in which his influence became of
+supreme weight. Between January and August 1792 the want
+of sympathy between the aims of the popular assembly and the
+spirit of the king and the queen became daily more flagrant and
+beyond power of disguise. In April war was declared against
+Austria, and to the confusion and distraction caused by the
+immense civil and political changes of the past two years was now
+added the ferment and agitation of war with an enemy on the
+frontier. The distrust felt by Paris for the court and its loyalty
+at length broke out in insurrection. On the memorable morning
+of the 10th of August 1792 the king and queen took refuge with
+the Legislative Assembly from the apprehended violence of the
+popular forces who were marching on the Tuileries. The share
+which Danton had in inspiring and directing this momentous
+rising is very obscure. Some look upon him as the head and
+centre of it. Apart from documents, support is given to this view
+by the fact that on the morrow of the fall of the monarchy Danton
+is found in the important post of minister of justice. This sudden
+rise from the subordinate office which he had held in the commune
+is a proof of the impression that his character had made on the
+insurrectionary party. To passionate fervour for the popular
+cause he added a certain broad steadfastness and an energetic
+practical judgment which are not always found in company with
+fervour. Even in those days, when so many men were so astonishing
+in their eloquence, Danton stands out as a master of commanding
+phrase. One of his fierce sayings has become a proverb.
+Against Brunswick and the invaders, &ldquo;<i>il nous faut de l&rsquo;audace, et
+encore de l&rsquo;audace, et toujours de l&rsquo;audace</i>,&rdquo;&mdash;we must dare, and
+again dare, and for ever dare. The tones of his voice were loud
+and vibrant. As for his bodily presence, he had, to use his own
+account of it, the athletic shape and the stern physiognomy of
+the Liberty for which he was ready to die. Jove the Thunderer,
+the rebel Satan, a Titan, Sardanapalus, were names that friends
+or enemies borrowed to describe his mien and port. He was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page818" id="page818"></a>818</span>
+thought about as a coarser version of the great tribune of the
+Constituent Assembly; he was called the Mirabeau of the sansculottes,
+and Mirabeau of the markets.</p>
+
+<p>In the executive government that was formed on the king&rsquo;s
+dethronement, this strong revolutionary figure found himself
+the colleague of the virtuous Roland and others of the Girondins.
+Their strength was speedily put to a terrible test. The alarming
+successes of the enemy on the frontier, and the surrender of two
+important fortresses, had engendered a natural panic in the capital.
+But in the breasts of some of the wild men whom the disorder
+of the time had brought to prominent place in the Paris commune
+this panic became murderously heated. Some hundreds
+of captives were barbarously murdered in the prisons. There has
+always been much dispute as to Danton&rsquo;s share in this dreadful
+transaction. At the time, it must be confessed, much odium on
+account of an imputed direction of the massacres fell to him.
+On the whole, however, he cannot be fairly convicted of any part
+in the plan. What he did was to make the best of the misdeed,
+with a kind of sombre acquiescence. He deserves credit for
+insisting against his colleagues that they should not flee from
+Paris, but should remain firm at their posts, doing what they
+could to rule the fierce storm that was raging around them.</p>
+
+<p>The elections to the National Convention took place in
+September, when the Legislative Assembly surrendered its
+authority. The Convention ruled France until October 1795.
+Danton was a member; resigning the ministry of justice, he took
+a foremost part in the deliberations and proceedings of the
+Convention, until his execution in April 1794. This short period
+of nineteen months was practically the life of Danton, so far as the
+world is concerned with him.</p>
+
+<p>He took his seat in the high and remote benches which gave
+the name of the Mountain to the thoroughgoing revolutionists
+who sat there. He found himself side by side with Marat, whose
+exaggerations he never countenanced; with Robespierre, whom
+he did not esteem very highly, but whose immediate aims were in
+many respects his own; with Camille Desmoulins and Phélippeaux,
+who were his close friends and constant partisans. The
+foes of the Mountain were the group of the Girondins,&mdash;eloquent,
+dazzling, patriotic, but unable to apprehend the fearful nature of
+the crisis, too full of vanity and exclusive party-spirit, and too
+fastidious to strike hands with the vigorous and stormy Danton.
+The Girondins dreaded the people who had sent Danton to the
+Convention; and they insisted on seeing on his hands the blood of
+the prison massacres of September. Yet in fact Danton saw
+much more clearly than they saw how urgent it was to soothe the
+insurrectionary spirit, after it had done the work of abolition
+which to him, as to them too, seemed necessary and indispensable.
+Danton discerned what the Girondins lacked the political genius
+to see, that this control of Paris could only be wisely effected by
+men who sympathized with the vehemence and energy of Paris,
+and understood that this vehemence and energy made the only
+force to which the Convention could look in resisting the Germans
+on the north-east frontier, and the friends of reaction in the
+interior. &ldquo;Paris,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is the natural and constituted centre
+of free France. It is the centre of light. When Paris shall perish
+there will no longer be a republic.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Danton was among those who voted for the death of the king
+(January 1793). He had a conspicuous share in the creation of
+the famous revolutionary tribunal, his aim being to take the
+weapons away from that disorderly popular vengeance which had
+done such terrible work in September. When all executive
+power was conferred upon a committee of public safety, Danton
+had been one of the nine members of whom that body was originally
+composed. He was despatched on frequent missions from
+the Convention to the republican armies in Belgium, and wherever
+he went he infused new energy into the work of national liberation.
+He pressed forward the erection of a system of national education,
+and he was one of the legislative committee charged with the
+construction of a new system of government. He vainly tried to
+compose the furious dissensions between Girondins and Jacobins.
+The Girondins were irreconcilable, and made Danton the object
+of deadly attack. He was far too robust in character to lose
+himself in merely personal enmities, but by the middle of May
+(1793) he had made up his mind that the political suppression
+of the Girondins had become indispensable. The position of
+the country was most alarming. Dumouriez, the victor of Valmy
+and Jemmappes, had deserted. The French arms were suffering
+a series of checks and reverses. A royalist rebellion was gaining
+formidable dimensions in the west. Yet the Convention was
+wasting time and force in the vindictive recriminations of
+faction. There is no positive evidence that Danton directly
+instigated the insurrection of the 31st of May and the 2nd of June,
+which ended in the purge of the Convention and the proscription
+of the Girondins. He afterwards spoke of himself as in some
+sense the author of this revolution, because a little while before,
+stung by some trait of factious perversity in the Girondins, he
+had openly cried out in the midst of the Convention, that if he
+could only find a hundred men, they would resist the oppressive
+authority of the Girondin commission of twelve. At any rate,
+he certainly acquiesced in the violence of the commune, and he
+publicly gloried in the expulsion of the men who stood obstinately
+in the way of a vigorous and concentrated exertion of
+national power. Danton, unlike the Girondins, accepted the fury
+of popular passion as an inevitable incident in the work of
+deliverance. Unlike Billaud Varenne or Hébert, or any other
+of the Terrorist party, he had no wish to use this frightful two-edged
+weapon more freely than was necessary. Danton, in short,
+had the instinct of the statesman. His object was to reconcile
+France with herself; to restore a society that, while emancipated
+and renewed in every part, should yet be stable; and
+above all to secure the independence of his country, both by
+a resolute defence against the invader, and by such a mixture
+of vigour with humanity as should reconcile the offended opinion
+of the rest of Europe. This, so far as we can make it out, was
+what was in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>The position of the Mountain had now undergone a complete
+change. In the Constituent Assembly its members did not
+number more than 30 out of the 578 of the third estate. In
+the Legislative Assembly they had not been numerous, and
+none of their chiefs had a seat. In the Convention for the
+first nine months they had an incessant struggle for their very
+lives against the Girondins. They were now (June 1793) for the
+first time in possession of absolute power. It was not easy, however,
+for men who had for many months been nourished on the
+ideas and stirred to the methods of opposition, all at once to
+develop the instincts of government. Actual power was in the
+hands of the two committees&mdash;that of public safety and of
+general security. Both were chosen out of the body of the
+Convention. The drama of the nine months between the expulsion
+of the Girondins and the execution of Danton turns upon the
+struggle of the committee to retain power&mdash;first, against the
+insurrectionary commune of Paris, and second, against the
+Convention, from which the committees derived an authority
+that was regularly renewed on the expiry of each short term.</p>
+
+<p>Danton, immediately after the fall of the Girondins, had
+thrown himself with extraordinary energy into the work to be
+done. The first task in a great city so agitated by anarchical
+ferment had been to set up a strong central authority. In this
+genuinely political task Danton was prominent. He was not a
+member of the committee of public safety when that body was
+renewed in the shape that speedily made its name so redoubtable
+all over the world. This was the result of a self-denying ordinance
+which he imposed upon himself. It was he who proposed that
+the powers of the committee should be those of a dictator, and
+that it should have copious funds at its disposal. In order to
+keep himself clear of any personal suspicion, he announced his
+resolution not to belong to the body which he had thus done his
+best to make supreme in the state. His position during the
+autumn of 1793 was that of a powerful supporter and inspirer,
+from without, of the government which he had been foremost in
+setting up. Danton was not a great practical administrator and
+contriver, like Carnot, for instance. But he had the gift of raising
+in all who heard him an heroic spirit of patriotism and fiery
+devotion, and he had a clear eye and a cool judgment in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page819" id="page819"></a>819</span>
+tempestuous emergencies which arose in such appalling succession.
+His distinction was that he accepted the insurrectionary forces,
+instead of blindly denouncing them as the Girondins had done.
+After these forces had shaken down the throne, and then, by
+driving away the Girondins, had made room for a vigorous
+government, Danton perceived the expediency of making all
+haste to an orderly state. Energetic prosecution of the war, and
+gradual conciliation of civil hatreds, had been, as we have said,
+the two marks of his policy ever since the fall of the monarchy.
+The first of these objects was fulfilled abundantly, partly owing
+to the energy with which he called for the arming of the whole
+nation against its enemies. His whole mind was now given to
+the second of them. But the second of them, alas, was desperate.</p>
+
+<p>It was to no purpose that, both in his own action and in the
+writings of Camille Desmoulins (<i>Le Vieux Cordelier</i>), of whom he
+was now and always the intimate and inspirer, he worked against
+the iniquities of the bad men, like Carrier and Collot d&rsquo;Herbois,
+in the provinces, and against the severity of the revolutionary
+tribunal in Paris. The black flood could not at a word or in an
+hour subside from its storm-lashed fury. The commune of Paris
+was now composed of men like Hébert and Chaumette, to whom
+the restoration of any sort of political order was for the time
+indifferent. They wished to push destruction to limits which
+even the most ardent sympathizers with the Revolution condemn
+now, and which Danton condemned then, as extravagant and
+senseless. Those men were not politicians, they were fanatics;
+and Danton, who was every inch a politician, though of a vehement
+type, had as little in common with them as John Calvin of
+Geneva had with John of Leiden and the Münster Anabaptists.
+The committee watched Hébert and his followers uneasily for
+many weeks, less perhaps from disapproval of their excesses
+than from apprehensions of their hostility to the committee&rsquo;s own
+power. At length the party of the commune proposed to revolt
+against the Convention and the committees. Then the blow was
+struck, and the Hébertists were swiftly flung into prison, and
+thence under the knife of the guillotine (March 24th, 1794).
+The execution of the Hébertists was the first victory of the
+revolutionary government over the extreme insurrectionary
+party. But the committees had no intention to concede anything
+to their enemies on the other side. If they refused to follow the
+lead of the anarchists of the commune, they were none the more
+inclined to give way to the Dantonian policy of clemency.
+Indeed, such a course would have been their own instant and
+utter ruin. The Terror was not a policy that could be easily
+transformed. A new policy would have to be carried out by new
+men, and this meant the resumption of power by the Convention,
+and the death of the Terrorists. In Thermidor 1794 such a
+revolution did take place, with those very results. But in
+Germinal feeling was not ripe. The committees were still too
+strong to be overthrown. And Danton seems to have shown
+a singular heedlessness. Instead of striking by vigour in the
+Convention, he waited to be struck. In these later days a certain
+discouragement seems to have come over his spirit. His wife had
+died during his absence on one of his expeditions to the armies;
+he had now married again, and the rumour went that he was
+allowing domestic happiness to tempt him from the keen incessant
+vigilance proper to the politician in such a crisis. He must have
+known that he had enemies. When the Jacobin club was
+&ldquo;purified&rdquo; in the winter, Danton&rsquo;s name would have been
+struck out as a moderate if Robespierre had not defended him.
+The committees had deliberated on his arrest soon afterwards,
+and again it was Robespierre who resisted the proposal. Yet
+though he had been warned of the lightning that was thus playing
+round his head, Danton did not move. Either he felt himself
+powerless, or he rashly despised his enemies. At last Billaud
+Varenne, the most prominent spirit of the committee after
+Robespierre, succeeded in gaining Robespierre over to his designs
+against Danton. Robespierre was probably actuated by the
+motives of selfish policy which soon proved the greatest blunder
+of his life. The Convention, aided by Robespierre and the
+authority of the committee, assented with ignoble unanimity.
+On the 30th of March Danton, Desmoulins and others of the
+party were suddenly arrested. Danton displayed such vehemence
+before the revolutionary tribunal, that his enemies feared
+lest he should excite the crowd in his favour. The Convention,
+in one of its worst fits of cowardice, assented to a proposal made
+by St Just that, if a prisoner showed want of respect for justice,
+the tribunal might pronounce sentence without further delay.
+Danton was at once condemned, and led, in company with
+fourteen others, including Camille Desmoulins, to the guillotine
+(April 5th, 1794). &ldquo;I leave it all in a frightful welter,&rdquo; he said;
+&ldquo;not a man of them has an idea of government. Robespierre
+will follow me; he is dragged down by me. Ah, better be a poor
+fisherman than meddle with the government of men!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Events went as Danton foresaw. The committees presently
+came to quarrel with the pretensions of Robespierre. Three
+months after Danton, Robespierre fell. His assent to the execution
+of Danton had deprived him of the single great force that
+might have supported him against the committee. The man who
+had &ldquo;saved France from Brunswick&rdquo; might perhaps have saved
+her from the White reaction of 1794.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;Sources for the life of Danton abound in the
+national archives and in the columns of the <i>Moniteur</i>. His <i>&OElig;uvres</i>
+were published by A. Vermorel (Paris, 1866), and his speeches are
+included in H. Morse Stephens&rsquo; <i>Principal Speeches of the Statesmen
+and Orators of the French Revolution</i> (vol. ii., Oxford, 1892); cf. F. V.
+Aulard, <i>Les Orateurs de la Législative et de la Convention</i> (Danton and
+his group; 2 vols., 1885-1886). The charges of corruption freely
+brought against Danton by contemporaries were accepted by many
+historians, and he has been persistently accused of instigating or at
+least abetting, by failure to use the power he possessed, the September
+massacres. A minute examination of the evidence by F. V. Aulard
+and J. F. E. Robinet in France, followed by A. H. Beesly in England,
+has placed his career and his character in a fairer light. The chief
+books on Danton&rsquo;s life are:&mdash;A. Bougeart, <i>Danton, documents pour
+servir à l&rsquo;histoire de la Révolution française</i> (Brussels, 1861); J. F. E.
+Robinet, <i>Danton, mémoire sur sa vie privée</i> (Paris, 1865), <i>Le Procès
+des Dantonistes</i> (Paris, 1879), <i>Danton émigré</i> (Paris, 1887), <i>Danton,
+homme d&rsquo;état</i> (Paris, 1889); F. V. Aulard, <i>Hist. pol. de la Rév. fr.</i>
+(Paris, 1901), and <i>Danton</i> (Paris, 1887); A. Dubost, <i>Danton et la
+politique contemporaine</i> (Paris, 1880); A. H. Beesly, <i>Life of Danton</i>
+(1899, new ed. 1906); H. Belloc, <i>Danton</i> (1899). There is a short
+&ldquo;Life of Danton&rdquo; in Morse Stephens&rsquo; <i>Principal Speeches</i>, cited
+above. See also C. F. Warwick, <i>Danton and the French Revolution</i>
+(1909).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(J. Mo.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANUBE<a name="ar116" id="ar116"></a></span> (Ger. <i>Donau</i>, Hungarian <i>Duna</i>, Rumanian <i>Dunarea</i>,
+Lat. <i>Danubius</i> or <i>Danuvius</i>, and in the lower part of its course
+<i>Ister</i>), the most important river of Europe as regards the volume
+of its outflow, but inferior to the Volga in length and in the area
+of its drainage. It originates at Donaueschingen in the Black
+Forest, where two mountain streams, the Brigach and the Brege,
+together with a third stream from the Palace Gardens, unite
+at an elevation of 2187 ft. above the sea to form the Danube
+so called. From this point it runs in an easterly direction until
+it falls into the Black Sea some 1750 m. from its source, being the
+only European river of importance with a course from west to east.
+Its basin, which comprises a territory of nearly 300,000 sq. m.,
+is bounded by the Black Forest, some of the minor Alpine ranges,
+the Bohemian Forest and the Carpathian Mountains on the north,
+and by the Alps and the Balkan range on the south. From the
+point where the Danube first becomes navigable, i.e. at its
+junction with the Iller at Ulm (1505 ft. above sea-level), it is fed
+by at least 300 tributaries, the principal of which on the right
+bank are the Inn, the Drave and the Save; while on the left
+bank are the Theiss or Tisza, the Olt, the Sereth and the Pruth.
+These seven rivers have a total length of 2920 m. and drain one
+half of the basin of the Danube.</p>
+
+<p>The course of this mighty river is rich in historical and political
+associations. For a long period it formed the frontier of the
+Roman empire; near Eining (above Regensburg) was
+the ancient Abusina, which for nearly five centuries
+<span class="sidenote">Historical and political associations.</span>
+was the chief Roman outpost against the northern
+barbarians. Traces of Trajan&rsquo;s wall still exist between
+that point and Wiesbaden, while another line of fortifications
+bearing the same emperor&rsquo;s name are found in the
+Dobrudja between Cernavoda (on the lower Danube) and
+Constantza. At intervening points are still found many notable
+Roman remains, such as Trajan&rsquo;s road, a marvellous work on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page820" id="page820"></a>820</span>
+right bank of the river in the rocky Kazan defile (separating the
+Balkans on the south from the Carpathians on the north), where
+a contemporary commemorative tablet is still conspicuously
+visible. At Turnu Severin below the end of this famous gorge
+are the remains of a solid masonry bridge constructed by the
+same emperor at the period of his Dacian conquests. But since
+Roman days the central Danube has never formed the boundary
+of a state; on the contrary it became the route followed from
+east to west by successive hordes of barbarians&mdash;the Huns,
+Avars, Slavs, Magyars and Turks; while the Franks under
+Charlemagne, the Bavarians and the Crusaders all marched in
+the opposite direction towards the east. In more modern days
+its banks were the scenes of many bloody battles during the
+Napoleonic Wars. Still more recently it has become the great
+highway of commerce for central Europe. It has been pointed
+out by J. G. Kohl (<i>Austria and the Danube</i>, London, 1844) and
+others that, in consequence of the Danube having been in
+constant use as the line of passage of migratory hostile tribes,
+it nowhere forms the boundary between two states from Orsova
+upwards, and thus it traverses as a central artery Württemberg,
+Bavaria, Austria and Hungary, while on the other hand various
+tributaries both north and south, which formed serious obstacles
+to the march of armies, have become lines of separation between
+different states. Thus Hungary is separated from Austria by the
+rivers March and Leitha; the river Enns, for a considerable
+period the extreme western boundary of the Magyar kingdom,
+still separates Upper and Lower Austria; the Inn and the
+Salzach divide Austria from Bavaria, and farther west the Iller
+separates Bavaria from Württemberg.</p>
+
+<p>The Danube after leaving Donaueschingen flows south-east
+in the direction of Lake Constance, and below Immendingen a
+considerable quantity of its waters escapes through
+subterranean fissures to the river Ach in the Rhine
+<span class="sidenote">Course.</span>
+basin. At Gutmadingen it turns to the north-east, which
+general direction, although with many windings, it maintains as
+far as Linz. At Tuttlingen it contracts and the hills crowd close
+to the banks, while ruins of castles crown almost every possible
+summit. The scenery is wild and beautiful until the river passes
+Sigmaringen. At Ulm, where the river leaves Württemberg
+and enters Bavaria, it is joined by a large tributary, the Iller,
+and from this point becomes navigable downstream for specially
+constructed boats carrying 100 tons of merchandise. It is here
+some 78 yds. in breadth, with an average depth of 3 ft. 6 in.
+Continuing its north-easterly course it passes through Bavaria,
+gradually widening its channel first at Steppberg, then at Ingolstadt,
+but finally narrowing again until it reaches Regensburg
+(height 949 ft.). At this point it changes its direction to the south-east,
+and passing along the southern slopes of the Bavarian
+Forest enters Austria at Passau (height 800 ft.). In its passage
+through Bavaria it receives several important affluents on both
+banks, notably on the right the Alpine rivers Lech, Isar and Inn,
+the last of which at the junction near Passau exceeds in volume
+the waters of the Danube.</p>
+
+<p>From Passau the Danube flows through Austria for a distance
+of 233 m. Closed in by mountains it flows past Linz in an unbroken
+stream&mdash;below, it expands and divides into many arms
+until it reaches the famous whirlpool near Grein where its waters
+unite and flow on in one channel for 40 m., through mountains
+and narrow passes. Beyond Krems it again divides, forming
+arms and islands beyond Vienna. The Danube between Linz and
+Vienna is renowned not only for its picturesque beauty but for the
+numerous medieval and modern buildings of historical and archaeological
+interest which crown its banks. The splendid Benedictine
+monastery of Melk and the ruins of Dürrenstein, the prison
+of Richard C&oelig;ur de Lion, are among the most interesting.</p>
+
+<p>After passing Vienna and the Marchfeld, the Danube (here
+316 yds. wide and 429 ft. above sea-level) passes through a defile
+formed by the lower spurs of the Alps and the Carpathians and
+enters Hungary at the ruined castle of Theben a little above
+Pressburg, the old Magyar capital, after leaving which the river
+passes through the Hungarian plains, receiving several affluents
+on both sides. It divides into three channels, forming several
+islands. After passing the fortress of Komárom it loses its easterly
+course at Vácz (Waitzen), and flows nearly due south for 230 m.
+down to its junction with the Drave (81 ft. above sea-level),
+passing in its course Budapest, the capital of Hungary, and
+farther on Mohács. Below Mohács the Franz Josef canal connects
+the Danube with the Theiss. After its junction with the
+Save the Danube follows a south-easterly direction for 200 m.
+until it is joined on the right bank of the Drave at Belgrade,
+above which it receives on the left bank the Theiss or Tisz., the
+largest of its Hungarian affluents. From Belgrade the Danube
+separates Hungary from Servia. It flows eastward until it has
+passed through the stupendous Kazan defile, in which its waters
+(at Semlin 1700 yds. wide and 40 ft. deep) are hemmed in by
+precipitous rocks to a width of only 162 yds., with a depth of
+150 ft. and a tremendous current. Emerging, above Orsova, at
+a height of 42 ft. above sea-level, it opens to nearly a mile in
+width and, turning south-eastwards, is again narrowed by its
+last defile, the Iron Gates, where it passes over the Prigrada
+rock. The course of the river through Hungary, from Pressburg
+to Orsova, is some 600 m.</p>
+
+<p>The river now flows south, separating Servia from Rumania
+down to its junction with the Timok, after which as far as
+Silistria, a distance of 284 m., it separates Rumania from
+Bulgaria. The north bank is mostly flat and marshy, whereas
+the Bulgarian bank is almost continuously crowned by low
+heights on which are built the considerable towns of Vidin
+(Widdin), Lom Palanka, Rustchuk and Silistria, all memorable
+names in Turko-Russian wars. From Silistria the river flows
+through Rumanian territory and after passing Cernavoda, where
+it is crossed by a modern railway bridge, it reaches (left bank)
+the important commercial ports of Braila and Galatz. A few
+miles east of Galatz the Pruth enters on the left bank, which is
+thenceforward Russian territory. The Danube flows in a single
+channel from Galatz for 30 m. to the Ismail Chatal (or fork),
+where it breaks up into the several branches of the delta. The
+Kilia branch from this point flows to the north-east past the
+towns of Ismail and Kilia, and 17 m. below the latter breaks up
+into another delta discharging by seven channels into the Black
+Sea. The Tulcea branch flows south-east from the Ismail
+Chatal, and 7 m. below the town of Tulcea separates into two
+branches. The St George&rsquo;s branch, holding a general, though
+winding, course to the south-east, discharges by two channels
+into the sea; and the Sulina branch, taking an easterly direction,
+emerges into the Black Sea 20 m. south of the Ochakov mouth of
+the Kilia, and 20 m. north of the Kedrilles mouth of the St George.</p>
+
+<p>In 1857 the proportion of discharge by the three branches of the
+Danube was Sulina 7%, St George&rsquo;s 30% and Kilia 63%; but
+in 1905 the relative proportions had altered to Sulina 9%, St
+George&rsquo;s 24% and Kilia 67%. The average outflow by the
+three mouths combined is 236,432 cub. ft. per second. The
+delta enclosed between the Kilia and St George&rsquo;s branches, about
+1000 sq. m. in area, mainly consists of one large marsh covered
+with reeds, and intersected by channels, relieved in places by
+isolated elevations covered with oak, beech and willows, many
+of them marking the ancient coast-line. On the eastern side of
+the Kilia delta the coast-line is constantly advancing and the
+sea becoming shallower, owing to the enormous amount of solid
+deposits brought down by the river. In time of ordinary flood
+the Kilia branch with its numerous mouths pours into the sea
+some 3000 cub. ft. of sand and mud per minute. Its effects are
+felt as far south as Sulina, and tend to necessitate the farther
+extension into the sea of the guiding piers of that port.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the 19th century, more especially during its
+latter half, much was done to render the Danube more available
+as a means of communication. In 1816 Austria and
+Bavaria made arrangements for the common utilization
+<span class="sidenote">Navigation.</span>
+of the upper portion of the river, and since then both
+governments have been liberal in expenditure on its improvement.
+In 1844 the Ludwigs Canal was constructed by King Louis
+of Bavaria. It is 110 m. in length and 7 ft. in depth, and connects
+the Danube at Kelheim (half way between Ulm and Passau) with
+the Rhine at Mainz by means of the rivers Altmühl, Regnitz and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page821" id="page821"></a>821</span>
+Main. Various other projects exist, one for the connexion of the
+Danube (near Vienna) with the river Oder at Oderberg, another
+for a canal from the Danube to the Moldau at Budweis, 125 m. in
+length, which owing to the regularization of the Moldau is the
+last uncompleted link of a navigable channel 1875 m. in length
+between Sulina and Hamburg at the mouths of the Danube and
+the Elbe respectively. There also exist other schemes for joining
+the Danube with the rivers Neckar and Theiss, and also for
+connecting the Oder Canal with the Vistula and the Dniester.
+Between Ulm and Vienna, a distance of 629 m., works of
+rectification have been numerous and have greatly improved
+the navigability of the river. The draining of the Donau-moos
+between Neuburg and Ingolstadt, commenced in 1791, was
+successfully completed about 1835; and in 1853 the removal of
+the rocks which obstructed the river below Grein was finally
+achieved; while at Vienna itself the whole mass of the Danube
+was conducted nearer the town for a distance of nearly 2 m.
+through an artificial channel 10 m. in length and 330 yds. in
+width, with a depth of about 12 ft., and at a cost with subsidiary
+works of over three millions sterling. The work, begun in 1866,
+involved the removal of 12,000,000 cub. metres of sand and
+gravel, and proved a great success, not only amply realizing its
+principal object, the protection of Vienna from disastrous inundations,
+but also improving the navigability of the river in that
+portion of its course. The Hungarian government also, throughout
+the latter half of the 19th century, expended vast sums at
+Budapest for the improvement of navigation and the protection
+of the town from inundation, and in the regularization of the
+Danube down to Orsova.</p>
+
+<p>In prehistoric times a great part of the plains of Hungary
+formed a large inland sea, which ultimately burst its bounds,
+whereupon the Danube forced its way through the Carpathians
+at the Kazan defile. Much of what then formed the bottom of
+this sea consisted until modern times of marshes and waste lands
+lying in the vicinity of its numerous rivers. The problem of
+draining and utilizing these lands was not the only difficulty to
+be surmounted by the Hungarian engineers; the requirements
+of navigation and the necessity in winter of preventing the
+formation of large ice-fields, such as caused the disastrous floods
+at Budapest in 1838, had also to be considered. In carrying out
+these works the Hungarian government between 1867 and 1895
+spent seven millions sterling, and a further expenditure of three
+and a half millions was provided for up to 1907. At Budapest,
+where the formation of ice-fields at the upper entrance of the two
+side arms of the Danube&mdash;the Promontor on the north, 20 m. in
+length, and the Soroksar, 35 m. long,&mdash;caused the inundation
+alluded to, the latter branch has been artificially blocked and
+the whole of the Danube now flows through Budapest in a single
+channel. For the first section of 60 m. after entering Hungary,
+the bed of the river, here surcharged with gravel, was constantly
+changing its course. It has been regularized throughout, the
+width of the stream varying from 320 to 400 yds. In the second
+section from Gönyö to Paks, 164 m. in length, the river had a
+tendency to form islands and sandbanks&mdash;its width now varies
+uniformly from 455 to 487 yds. The third section of 113 m., from
+Paks to the mouth of the Drave, differed from the others and made
+innumerable twists and curves. No fewer than seventeen cuttings
+have been made, reducing the original course of the river by 75 m.
+The fourth section, 217 m. in length, from the Drave to Old
+Moldova, resembles in its characteristics the second section and
+has been similarly treated. Cuttings have also been made where
+necessary, and the widths of the channel are 487 yds. to the mouth
+of the Theiss, 650 between that point and the Save, and lower
+down 760 yds. In the fifth and last section from Old Moldova
+to Orsova and the Iron Gates the river is enclosed by mountains
+and rocky banks, and the obstacles to navigation are rocks and
+whirlpools.</p>
+
+<p>Article VI. of the treaty of London (1871) authorized the
+powers which possess the shores of this part of the Danube to
+come to an understanding with the view of removing these
+impediments, and to have the right of levying a provisional tax
+on vessels of every flag which may henceforth benefit thereby
+until the extinction of the debt contracted for the execution of the
+works. As the riverain powers could not come to an agreement on
+the subject, the great powers at the congress of Berlin (1878)
+entrusted to Austria-Hungary the execution of the works in
+question. Austria-Hungary subsequently conferred its rights on
+Hungary, by which country the works were carried out at a cost
+of about one and a half millions sterling.</p>
+
+<p>The principal obstructions between Old Moldova and Turnu
+Severin were the Stenka Rapids, the Kozla Dojke Rapids, the
+Greben section and the Iron Gates. At the first named there
+was a bank of rocks, some of them dry at low water, extending
+almost across the river (985 yds. wide). The fall of the river bed
+is small, but the length of the rapid is 1100 yds. The Kozla
+Dojke, 9 m. below the Stenka Rapids, extend also for 1100 yds.,
+with a fall of 1 in 1000, where two banks of rocks cause a sudden
+alternation in the direction of the current. The river is here
+only 170 to 330 yds. in width. Six miles farther on is the Greben
+section, the most difficult part of the works of improvement. A
+spur of the Greben mountains runs out below two shoals where
+the river suddenly narrows to 300 yds. at low water, but presently
+widens to 1½ m. Seven miles lower down are the Jucz Rapids,
+where the river-bed has a fall of 1 in 433. At the Iron Gates,
+34 m. below the Greben, the Prigrada rocky bank nearly blocked
+the river at the point where it widens out after leaving the Kazan
+defile. The general object of the works was to obtain a navigable
+depth of water at all seasons of 2 metres (6.56 ft.) on that portion
+of the river above Orsova, and a depth of 3 metres (9.84 ft.)
+below that town. To effect this at Stenka, Kozla Dojke, Islaz
+and Tachtalia, channels 66 yds. wide had to be cut in the solid
+rock to a depth of 6 ft. 6 in. below low water. The point of the
+Greben spur had to be entirely removed for a distance of 167 yds.
+back from its original face. Below the Greben point a training
+wall 7 to 9 ft. high, 10 ft. at top and nearly 4 m. in length, has
+been built along the Servian shore in order to confine the river
+in a narrow channel. At Jucz another similar channel had to be
+cut and a training wall built. At the Iron Gates a channel 80 yds.
+wide, nearly 2000 yds. in length and 10 ft. deep (in the immediate
+vicinity of traces of an old Roman canal) had to be cut on the
+Servian side of the river through solid rock. Training walls have
+been built on either side of the channel to confine the water so as
+to raise its level; that on the right bank having a width of 19 ft.
+6 in. at top, and serving as a tow-path; that on the left being
+13 ft. in width. These training walls are built of stone with flat
+revetments to protect them against ice. These formidable and
+expensive works have not altogether realized the expectations
+that had been formed of them. One most important result,
+however, has been attained, i.e. vessels can now navigate the
+Iron Gates at all seasons of the year when the river is not closed
+by ice, whereas formerly at extreme low water, lasting generally
+for about three months in the late summer and autumn, through
+navigation was always at a standstill, and goods had to be landed
+and transported considerable distances by land. The canal was
+opened for traffic on the 1st of October 1898. It was designed of
+sufficient width, as was supposed, for the simultaneous passage
+of boats in opposite directions; but on account of the great
+velocity of the current this has been found to be impracticable.</p>
+
+<p>From the Iron Gates down to Braila, which is the highest point
+to which large sea-going ships ascend the river, there have been
+no important works of improvement. From Braila to
+Sulina, a distance of about 100 m., the river falls under
+<span class="sidenote">European commission of the Danube.</span>
+the jurisdiction of the European commission of the
+Danube, an institution of such importance as to merit
+lengthened notice. It was called into existence under
+Art. XVI. of the treaty of Paris (1856), and in November of that
+year a commission was constituted in which Austria, France,
+Great Britain, Prussia, Russia, Sardinia and Turkey were each
+represented by one delegate &ldquo;to designate and cause to be executed
+the works necessary below Isaktcha<a name="fa1g" id="fa1g" href="#ft1g"><span class="sp">1</span></a> to clear the mouths
+of the Danube as well as the neighbouring parts of the sea, from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page822" id="page822"></a>822</span>
+the sands and other impediments which obstructed them, in order
+to put that part of the river and the said parts of the sea in the
+best possible state for navigation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In Art. XVIII. of the same treaty it was anticipated that the
+European commission would have finished the works described
+within the period of two years, when it was to be dissolved and its
+powers taken over by a Riverain commission to be established
+under the same treaty; but this commission has never come
+into existence. Extended by short periods up to 1871, the
+powers of the European commission were then prolonged under
+the treaty of London for twelve years. At the congress of Berlin
+in 1878 its jurisdiction was extended from Isakcea to Galatz
+(26 m.), and it was decided that the commission, in which
+Rumania was henceforward to be represented by a delegate,
+should exercise its powers in complete independence of the
+territorial authority. By the treaty of London of 1883 the
+jurisdiction of the commission was extended from Galatz to
+Braila and its powers were prolonged for twenty-one years (i.e. till
+the 24th of April 1904), after which its existence was to continue
+by tacit prolongation for successive terms of three years unless
+one of the high contracting powers should propose any modification
+in its constitution or attributes. It was also decided that
+the European commission should no longer exercise any effective
+control over that portion of the Kilia branch of which the two
+banks belonged to one of the riverain powers (Russia and
+Rumania), while as regards that portion of it which separated the
+two countries, control was to be exercised by the Russian and
+Rumanian delegates on the European commission. Russia was
+also authorized to levy tolls intended to cover the expenses of
+any works of improvement that might be undertaken by her.
+Art. VII. of the same treaty declared that the regulations for
+navigation, river police, and superintendence drawn up on the
+2nd of June 1882 by the European commission, assisted by the
+delegates of Servia and Bulgaria, should be made applicable to
+that part of the Danube situated between the Iron Gates and
+Braila. In consequence of Rumania&rsquo;s opposition, the proposed
+<i>Commission Mixte</i> was never formed, and these regulations have
+never been put in force. As regards the extension of the powers
+of the European commission to Braila, 11 m. above Galatz, and
+at the head of the maritime navigation, a tacit understanding has
+been arrived at, under which questions concerning navigation
+proper come under the jurisdiction of the commission, while the
+police of the ports remains in the hands of the Rumanian
+authorities.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Charles Hartley, who was chief engineer of the commission
+from 1856 to 1907,<a name="fa2g" id="fa2g" href="#ft2g"><span class="sp">2</span></a> in a paper contributed to the Institution of
+Civil Engineers in 1873 (vol. xxxvi.), gave the following graphic
+description of the state of the Sulina mouth when the commission
+entered on its labours in 1856:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>&ldquo;The entrance to the Sulina branch was a wild open seaboard
+strewn with wrecks, the hulls and masts of which, sticking out of
+the submerged sandbanks, gave to mariners the only guide where the
+deepest channel was to be found. The depth of the channel varied
+from 7 to 11 ft., and was rarely more than 9 ft.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The site now occupied by wide quays extending several miles
+in length was then entirely covered with water when the sea rose a
+few inches above ordinary level, and that even in a perfect calm;
+the banks of the river near the mouth were only indicated by
+clusters of wretched hovels built on piles and by narrow patches of
+sand skirted by tall weeds, the only vegetable product of the vast
+swamps beyond.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For some years before the improvements, an average of 2000
+vessels of an aggregate capacity of 400,000 tons visited the Danube,
+and of this number more than three-fourths loaded either the whole
+or part of their cargoes from lighters in the Sulina roadstead, where,
+lying off a lee shore, they were frequently exposed to the greatest
+danger. Shipwrecks were of common occurrence, and occasionally
+the number of disasters was appalling. One dark winter night in
+1855, during a terrific gale, 24 sailing ships and 60 lighters went
+ashore off the mouth and upwards of 300 persons perished.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The state of affairs in the river was not much better than at the
+Sulina mouth. Of the three arms of the Danube, the Kilia, the
+Sulina and the St George, the central or Sulina branch, owing to its
+greater depth of water over the bar, had from time immemorial
+been the principal waterway for sea-going vessels; its average
+depth throughout its course, which could not always be counted
+on, was 8 ft., but it contained numerous shoals where vessels had
+to lighten, so that cargo had often to be shifted several times in
+the voyage down the river. It also contained numerous bends
+and sharp curves, sources of the greatest difficulty to navigation.</p>
+
+<p>The commission fixed its seat at Galatz. Provisional works
+of improvement were begun almost immediately at the mouth of
+the Sulina branch of the Danube, but two years were spent in
+discussing the relative claims to adoption of the Kilia, the Sulina
+and the St George&rsquo;s mouths. Unable to agree, the delegates
+referred the question to their respective governments, and a
+technical commission appointed by France, England, Prussia and
+Sardinia met at Paris and decided unanimously in favour of St
+George&rsquo;s; but recommended, instead of the embankment of the
+natural channel, the formation of an artificial canal 17 ft. in
+depth closed by sluices at its junction with the river, and reaching
+the sea at some distance from the natural embouchure. The
+choice of St George&rsquo;s made by this commission was adopted at
+Galatz in December 1858, and six of the seven representatives
+voted for its canalization; but owing to various political and
+financial considerations, it was ultimately decided to do nothing
+more in the meantime than render permanent and effective
+the provisional works already in progress at the Sulina mouth.
+These consisted of two piers forming a seaward prolongation of
+the fluvial channel, begun in 1858 and completed in 1861. The
+northern pier had a length of 4631 ft., the southern of 3000,
+and the depth of the water in which they were built varied from
+6 to 20 ft. At the commencement of the works the depth of the
+channel was only 9 ft. but by their completion it had increased
+to 19 ft. The works designed and constructed by Sir Charles
+Hartley had in fact proved so successful that nothing more was
+ever heard of the St George&rsquo;s project. In 1865 a new lighthouse
+was erected at the end of the north pier. The value of these
+early works of the commission is shown by the fact that of 2928
+vessels navigating the lower Danube in 1855, 36 were wrecked,
+while of 2676 in 1865 only 7 were wrecked. In 1871 it was
+found expedient to lengthen the piers seaward, and in 1876 the
+south jetty was prolonged, so as to bring its end exactly opposite
+the lighthouse on the north pier. This resulted in an increase of
+the depth to 20½ ft., and for fifteen years, from 1879 to 1895, this
+depth remained constant without the aid of dredging. In 1894,
+owing to the constantly increasing size of vessels frequenting the
+Danube, it was found necessary to deepen the entrance still
+further, and to construct two parallel piers between the main
+jetties, reducing the breadth of the river to 500 ft., and thereby
+increasing the scour. There is now a continuous channel 24 ft.
+in depth, 5200 ft. in length, and 300 ft. in width between the piers,
+and 600 ft. outside the extremities of the piers, until deep water
+is reached in the open sea. This depth is only maintained by
+constant dredging. The engineers of the commission have been
+equally successful in dealing with the Sulina branch of the river.
+Its original length of 45 m. from St George&rsquo;s Chatal to the sea was
+impeded at the commencement of the improvement works by
+eleven bends, each with a radius of less than 1000 ft., besides
+numerous others of somewhat larger radius, and its bed was
+encumbered by ten shifting shoals, varying from 8 to 13 ft. in
+depth at low water. By means of a series of training walls,
+by groynes thrown out from the banks, by revetments of the
+banks, and by dredging, all done with the view of narrowing the
+river, a minimum depth of 11 ft. was attained in 1865, and 13 ft.
+in 1871. In 1880 the needs of commerce and the increased size
+of steamers frequenting the river necessitated the construction
+of a new entrance from the St George&rsquo;s branch. This work,
+designed in 1857, but unexecuted during a quarter of a century,
+owing to insufficiency of funds, was completed in 1882; and in
+1886, after other comparatively short cuttings had been made to
+get rid of difficult bends and further to deepen the channel
+without having to resort to dredgers, the desired minimum depth
+of 15 ft. was attained. Since that date a series of new cuttings
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page823" id="page823"></a>823</span>
+has been made. These have shortened the length of the Sulina
+canal by 11 nautical m., eliminated all the difficult bends and
+shoals, and provided an almost straight waterway 34 m. in length
+from Sulina to St George&rsquo;s Chatal, with a minimum depth of
+20 ft. when the river is at its lowest.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days of the commission, i.e. from 1857 to 1860, the
+money spent on the works of improvement, amounting to about
+£150,000, was advanced as a loan by the then territorial power,
+Turkey; but in 1860 the commission began to levy taxes on
+vessels frequenting the river, and since then has repaid its debt
+to the Turkish government, as well as various loans for short
+periods, and a larger one of £120,000 guaranteed by the powers,
+and raised in 1868, mainly through the energy of the British
+commissioner, Sir John Stokes. This last loan was paid off in
+1882 and the commission became free from debt in 1887. It has
+now an average annual income of about £80,000 derived from
+taxes paid by ships when<a name="fa3g" id="fa3g" href="#ft3g"><span class="sp">3</span></a> leaving the river. The normal annual
+expenditure amounts to about £56,000, while £24,000 is generally
+allotted to extraordinary works, such as new cuttings, &amp;c.
+Between 1857 and 1905 a sum of about one and three quarter
+millions sterling was spent on engineering works, including the
+construction of quays, lighthouses, workshops and buildings,
+&amp;c. Sulina from being a collection of mud hovels has developed
+into a town with 5000 inhabitants; a well-found hospital has been
+established where all merchant sailors receive gratuitous treatment;
+lighthouses, quays, floating elevators and an efficient
+pilot service all combine to make it a first-class port.</p>
+
+<p>The result of all the combined works for the rectification of the
+Danube is that from Sulina up to Braila the river is navigable for
+sea-going vessels up to 4000 tons register, from Braila to Turnu
+Severin it is open for sea-going vessels up to 600 tons, and for flat
+barges of from 1500 to 2000 tons capacity. From Turnu Severin
+to Orsova navigation is confined to river steamers, tugs and
+barges drawing 6 ft. of water. Thence to Vienna the draught is
+limited to 5 ft., and from Vienna to Regensburg to a somewhat
+lower figure. Barges of 600 tons register can be towed from the
+lower Danube to Regensburg. Here petroleum tanks have been
+constructed for the storage of Rumanian petroleum, the first
+consignment of which in 1898, conveyed in tank boats, took six
+weeks on the voyage up from Giurgevo. The principal navigation
+company on the upper Danube is the Société Impériale et Royale
+Autrichienne of Vienna, which started operations in 1830. This
+company also owns the Fünfkirchen mines, producing annually
+500,000 tons of coal. The society transports goods and
+passengers between Galatz and Regensburg. A less important
+society is the Rumanian State Navigation Company, possessing
+a large flotilla of tugs and barges, which run to Budapest, where
+they have established a combined service with the South Danube
+German Company for the transport of goods from Pest to
+Regensburg. A Hungarian Navigation Company, subsidized by
+the state, has also been formed, and the Hungarian railways, the
+Servian government and private owners own a large number of
+tugs and barges.</p>
+
+<p>But it is the trade of the lower Danube that has principally
+benefited. Freights from Galatz and Braila to North Sea ports
+have fallen from 50s. to about 12s. or even 10s. per ton. Sailing
+ships of 200 tons register have given way to steamers up to
+4000 tons register carrying a deadweight of nearly 8000 tons; and
+good order has succeeded chaos. From 1847 to 1860 an average
+of 203 British ships entered the Danube averaging 193 tons each;
+from 1861 to 1889, 486 ships averaging 796 tons; in 1893, 905
+vessels of 1,287,762 tons, or 68% of the total traffic, and rather
+more than two and a half times the total amount of British
+tonnage visiting the Danube in the fourteen years between 1847
+and 1860. The average amount of cereals (principally wheat)
+annually exported from the Danube during the period 1901-1905
+was 13,000,000 quarters, i.e. about five times the average annual
+exportation during the period 1861-1867. It has been calculated
+that between 1861 and 1902 the total tonnage of ships frequenting
+the Danube increased five-fold, while the mean size of individual
+ships increased ten-fold.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;Marsiglius, <i>Danubius Pannonico-Mysicus</i> (the
+Hague, 1726); Schulte, <i>Donaufahrten</i> (1819-1829); Planche,
+<i>Descent of the Danube</i> (1828); Széchenyi, <i>Über die Donauschiffahrt</i>
+(1836); A. Müller, <i>Die Donau vom Ursprunge bis zu den Mündungen</i>
+(1839-1841); J. G. Kohl, <i>Die Donau</i> (Trieste, 1853-1854); G. B.
+Rennie, <i>Suggestions for the Improvement of the Danube</i> (1856); Sir
+C. A. Hartley, <i>Description of the Delta of the Danube</i> (1862 and 1874);
+<i>Mémoire sur le régime administratif établi aux embouchures du
+Danube</i> (Galatz, 1867); Desjardins, <i>Rhône et Danube</i>, a defence of
+the canalization scheme (Paris, 1870); <i>Carte du Danube entre Braïla
+et la mer</i>, published by the European Commission (Leipzig, 1874);
+Peters, <i>Die Donau und ihr Gebiet, eine geologische Studie</i> (1876);
+A. F. Heksch, <i>Guide illustré sur le Danube</i> (Vienna, 1883); F. D.
+Millet, <i>The Danube</i> (New York, 1893); Schweiger-Lerchenfeld, <i>Die
+Donau als Völkerweg, Schiffahrtsstrasse, und Reiseroute</i> (Vienna,
+1895); D. A. Sturza, <i>La Question des Portes de Fer et des cataractes
+du Danube</i> (Berlin, 1899); A. de Saint Clair, <i>Le Danube: étude de
+droit international</i> (Paris, 1899); D. A. Sturdza, <i>Recueil de documents
+relatifs à la liberté de navigation du Danube</i>, pp. 933 (Berlin,
+1904); A. Schroth-Ukmar, <i>Donausagen von Passau bis Wien</i>
+(Vienna, 1904).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(H. Tr.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1g" id="ft1g" href="#fa1g"><span class="fn">1</span></a> Isakcea was 66 nautical m. from the sea measured by the
+Sulina arm of the Danube, 37 m. below Braila and 26 m. below
+Galatz.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2g" id="ft2g" href="#fa2g"><span class="fn">2</span></a> Sir Charles Hartley became consulting engineer in 1872, when he
+was succeeded as resident engineer by Mr Charles Kühl, C.E., C.M.G.
+To those two gentlemen is mainly due the conspicuous success of the
+engineering works.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3g" id="ft3g" href="#fa3g"><span class="fn">3</span></a> Ships pay no taxes to the commission on entering the river, but
+on leaving it every ship of over 1500 tons register pays 1s. 5d. per
+registered ton if loaded at Galatz or Braila, or 11d. per ton if loaded
+at Sulina. This includes pilotage and light dues. Smaller vessels
+pay less and ships of less than 300 tons are exempt.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANVERS,<a name="ar117" id="ar117"></a></span> a township of Essex county, on the coast of
+Massachusetts, U.S.A., about 19 m. N. by E. of Boston. Pop.
+(1890) 7454; (1900) 8542, of whom 1873 were foreign-born;
+(1910 census) 9407. Danvers includes an area of 14 sq. m. of
+level country diversified by hills. There are several villages or
+business centres, the largest of which, bearing the same name
+as the township, is served by the Boston &amp; Maine railway. In
+the township are a state insane asylum, with accommodation for
+1000 patients; St John&rsquo;s Preparatory College (Roman Catholic),
+conducted by the Xavierian Brothers; and, in Peabody Park,
+the Peabody Institute, with a good public library and museum,
+the gift (1867) of George Peabody. The Danvers historical
+society has a valuable collection. Although chiefly a residential
+town, Danvers has various manufactures, the most important of
+which are leather, boots and shoes, bricks, boxes and electric
+lamps. The total value of the factory product in 1905 was
+$2,017,908, of which more than one half was the value of leather.
+Danvers owns its water-works and its electric lighting and power
+plant. A part of what is now Danvers was included in the grant
+made by the court of assistants to Governor John Endecott and
+the Rev. Samuel Skelton of the Salem church in 1632. Danvers
+was set off from Salem as a district in 1752 and was incorporated
+as a township in 1757, but the act of incorporation was disallowed
+in 1759 by the privy council on the recommendation of the board
+of trade, in view of George II.&rsquo;s disapproval of the incorporation
+of new townships at that time,&mdash;hence the significance of the
+words on the seal of Danvers, &ldquo;The King Unwilling&rdquo;; in 1775
+the district was again incorporated. Salem Village, a part of
+the present township, was the centre of the famous witchcraft
+delusion in 1692. In 1885 South Danvers was set off as a separate
+township, and in 1868 was named Peabody in honour of George
+Peabody, who was born and is buried there. In 1857 part of
+Beverly was annexed to Danvers. Among distinguished natives
+of Danvers are Samuel Holton (1738-1816), a member (1778-1780
+and 1782-1787) of the Continental Congress and (1793-1795) of
+the Federal Congress; Israel Putnam; Moses Porter (1755-1822),
+who served through the War of Independence and the War of
+1812; and Grenville Mellen Dodge (b. 1831), a prominent railway
+engineer, who fought in the Union army in the Civil War,
+reaching the rank of major-general of volunteers, was a Republican
+member of the national House of Representatives in
+1867-1869, and in 1898 president of the commission which
+investigated the management of the war with Spain.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See J. W. Hanson, <i>History of the Town of Danvers</i> (Danvers, 1848);
+Ezra D. Hines, <i>Historic Danvers</i> (Danvers, 1894) and <i>Historical
+Address</i> (Boston, 1907), in celebration of the 150th anniversary of
+the first incorporation; and A. P. White, &ldquo;History of Danvers&rdquo; in
+<i>History of Essex County, Mass.</i> (Philadelphia, 1888).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANVILLE,<a name="ar118" id="ar118"></a></span> a city and the county-seat of Vermilion county,
+Illinois, U.S.A., in the E. part of the state, near the Big Vermilion
+river, 120 m. S. of Chicago. Pop. (1890) 11,491; (1900) 16,354,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page824" id="page824"></a>824</span>
+of whom 1435 were foreign-born; (1910) 27,871. Danville
+is served by the Chicago &amp; Eastern Illinois (whose shops are
+here), the Wabash, the Chicago, Indiana &amp; Southern, and the
+Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago &amp; St Louis railways, and by three
+interurban lines. There are three public parks (Lincoln, Douglas
+and Ellsworth), a Carnegie library (1883), and a national home
+for disabled volunteer soldiers (opened in 1898). Situated in the
+vicinity of an extensive coalfield (the Grape Creek district),
+Danville has a large trade in coal; it has also several manufacturing
+establishments engaged principally in the construction and
+repair of railway cars, and in the manufacture of bricks, foundry
+products, glass, carriages, flour and hominy. The value of the
+factory products of the city in 1905 was $3,304,120, an increase
+of 72.7% since 1900. Danville was first settled about 1830 and
+was first incorporated in 1839; in 1874 it was chartered as a city
+under the general state law of 1872 for the incorporation of
+municipalities. It annexed Vermilion Heights in 1905, South
+Danville (pop. in 1900, 898) in 1906, and Germantown (pop. in
+1900, 1782) and Roselawn in 1907.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANVILLE,<a name="ar119" id="ar119"></a></span> a city and the county-seat of Boyle county,
+Kentucky, U.S.A., 113 m. S. by W. of Cincinnati. Pop. (1890)
+3766; (1900) 4285 (1913 negroes) (1910) 5420. The city is
+served by the Southern and the Cincinnati Southern railways,
+the latter connecting at Junction City (4 m. S.) with the Louisville
+&amp; Nashville railway. Danville is an attractive city,
+situated in the S.E. part of the fertile &ldquo;Blue Grass region&rdquo;
+of Kentucky. In McDowell Park there is a monument to the
+memory of Dr Ephraim McDowell (1771-1830), who after 1795
+lived in Danville, and is famous for having performed in
+1809 the first entirely successful operation for the removal of
+an ovarian tumour. Danville is the seat of several educational
+institutions, the most important of which is the Central University
+of Kentucky (Presbyterian), founded in 1901 by the
+consolidation of Centre College (opened at Danville in 1823),
+and the Central University (opened at Richmond, Ky., in 1874).
+The law school also is in Danville. The classical, scientific and
+literary department of the present university is still known as
+Centre College; the medical and dental departments are in Louisville,
+and the university maintains a preparatory school, the
+Centre College academy, at Danville. In 1908 the university had
+87 instructors and 696 students. Other institutions at Danville
+are Caldwell College for women (1860; Presbyterian), and the
+Kentucky state institution for deaf mutes (1823). The Transylvania
+seminary was opened here in 1785, but four years later
+was removed to Lexington (q.v.), and a Presbyterian theological
+seminary was founded here in 1853, but was merged with the
+Louisville theological seminary (known after 1902 as the
+Presbyterian Theological Seminary of Kentucky) in 1901. The
+municipality owns and operates its water-works and power plant.
+From its first settlement in 1781 until the admission of Kentucky
+into the Union in 1792 Danville was an important political centre.
+There was an influential political club here from 1786 to 1790,
+and here, too, sat the several conventions&mdash;nine in all&mdash;which
+asked for a separation from Virginia, discussed the proposed
+conditions of separation from that commonwealth, framed the
+first state constitution, and chose Frankfort as the capital.
+Danville was incorporated in 1789. It was the birthplace of
+James G. Birney and of Theodore O&rsquo;Hara.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANVILLE,<a name="ar120" id="ar120"></a></span> a borough and the county-seat of Montour
+county, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., on the N. branch of the Susquehanna
+river, about 65 m. N. by E. of Harrisburg. Pop. (1890)
+7998; (1900) 8042, of whom 771 were foreign-born; (1910
+census) 7517. It is served by the Delaware, Lackawanna &amp;
+Western, and the Philadelphia &amp; Reading railways, and by
+electric railway to Bloomsburg. The borough is built on an
+elevated bank of the river at the base of Montour Ridge, where
+the narrow valley appears to be shut in on every side by hills;
+the river is spanned by a steel bridge, built in 1905. Iron, coal
+and limestone abound in the vicinity, and the borough has large
+manufactories of stoves and furnaces, and of iron and steel, in one
+of which in 1845 a &ldquo;T&rdquo;-rail, probably the first in America, was
+rolled. It is the seat of a state hospital for the insane (established
+in 1868). The water-works and electric light plant are owned and
+operated by the municipality. A settlement was founded here
+about 1776 by Captain William Montgomery and his son Daniel;
+and a town was laid out in 1792 and called Dan&rsquo;s Town until the
+present name was adopted a few years later. Growth was slow
+until the discovery of iron ore on Montour Ridge, followed in
+1832 by the completion of the N. branch of the Pennsylvania
+Canal, which runs through the centre of the borough. Danville
+was incorporated in 1849.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANVILLE,<a name="ar121" id="ar121"></a></span> a city in Pittsylvania county, Virginia, U.S.A., on
+the Dan river about 140 m. (by rail) S.W. of Richmond. Pop.
+(1890) 10,305; (1900) 16,520 (6515 negroes); (1910) 19,020. It
+is on the main line of the Southern railway, and is the terminus
+of branches to Richmond and Norfolk; it is also served by the
+Danville &amp; Western railway, a road (75 m. long) connecting with
+Stuart, Va., and controlled by the Southern, though operated
+independently. The city is built on high ground above the river.
+It has a city hall, a general hospital, a Masonic temple, and a
+number of educational institutions, including the Roanoke
+College (1860; Baptist), for young women; the Randolph-Macon
+Institute (1897; Methodist Episcopal, South), for girls;
+and a commercial college. The river furnishes valuable water-power,
+which is utilized by the city&rsquo;s manufactories (value of
+product in 1900, third in rank in the state, $8,103,484, of which
+only $3,693,792 was &ldquo;factory&rdquo; product; in 1905 the &ldquo;factory&rdquo;
+product was valued at $4,774,818), including cotton mills&mdash;in
+1905 Danville ranked first among the cities of the state in the
+value of cotton goods produced&mdash;a number of tobacco factories,
+furniture and overall factories, and flour and knitting mills.
+The city is a jobbing centre and wholesale market for a considerable
+area in southern Virginia and northern North Carolina, and
+is probably the largest loose-leaf tobacco market in the country,
+selling about 40,000,000 &#8468; annually. In the industrial suburb
+of Schoolfield, which in 1908 had a population of about 3000, there
+is a large textile mill. The city owns and operates its water-supply
+system (with an excellent filtration plant installed in 1904)
+and its gas and electric lighting plants. Danville was settled
+about 1770, was first incorporated as a town in 1792, and became
+a city in 1833; it is politically independent of Pittsylvania
+county. To Danville, after the evacuation of Richmond on the
+2nd of April 1865, the archives of the Confederacy were carried,
+and here President Jefferson Davis paused for a few days in his
+flight southward.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DANZIG,<a name="ar122" id="ar122"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Dantsic</span> (Polish <i>Gdansk</i>), a strong maritime
+fortress and seaport of Germany, capital of the province of West
+Prussia, on the left bank of the western arm of the Vistula,
+4 m. S. of its entrance, at Neufahrwasser, into the Baltic, 253 m.
+N.E. from Berlin by rail. Pop. (1885) 114,805; (1905) 159,088.
+The city is traversed by two branches of the Mottlau, a small
+tributary of the Vistula, dredged to a depth of 15 ft., thus enabling
+large vessels to reach the wharves of the inner town. The
+strong fortifications which, with ramparts, bastions and wet
+ditches, formerly entirely surrounded the city, were removed on
+the north and west sides in 1895-1896, the trenches filled in, and
+the area thus freed laid out on a spacious plan. One portion,
+acquired by the municipality, has been turned into promenades
+and gardens, the Steffens Park, outside the Olivaer Tor, fifty acres
+in extent, occupying the north-western corner. The remainder of
+the massive defences remain, with twenty bastions, in the hands
+of the military authorities; the works for laying the surrounding
+country under water on the eastern side have been modernized,
+and the western side defended by a cordon of forts crowning the
+hills and extending down to the port of Neufahrwasser.</p>
+
+<p>Danzig almost alone of larger German cities still preserves its
+picturesque medieval aspect. The grand old patrician houses of
+the days of its Hanseatic glory, with their lofty and often elaborately
+ornamented gables and their balconied windows, are the
+delight of the visitor to the town. Only one ancient feature is
+rapidly disappearing&mdash;owing to the exigencies of street traffic&mdash;the
+stone terraces close to the entrance doors and abutting on the
+street. Of its old gates the Hohe Tor, modelled after a Roman
+triumphal arch, is a remarkable monumental erection of the 16th
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page825" id="page825"></a>825</span>
+century. From it runs the Lange Gasse, the main street, to the
+Lange Markt. On this square stands the Artus- or Junker-hof
+(the merchant princes of the middle ages were in Germany styled
+<i>Junker</i>, squire), containing a hall richly decorated with wood
+carving and pictures, once used as a banqueting-room and now
+serving as the exchange. There are twelve Protestant and seven
+Roman Catholic churches and two synagogues. Of these the
+most important is St Mary&rsquo;s, begun in 1343 and completed in
+1503, one of the largest Protestant churches in existence. It
+possesses a famous painting of the Last Judgment, formerly
+attributed to Jan van Eyck, but probably by Memlinc. Among
+other ancient buildings of note are the beautiful Gothic town hall,
+surmounted by a graceful spire, the armoury (Zeughaus) and
+the Franciscan monastery, restored in 1871, and now housing
+the municipal picture gallery and a collection of antiquities.
+Of modern structures, the government offices, the house of the
+provincial diet, the post office and the palace of the commander
+of the 17th army corps, which has its headquarters in Danzig, are
+the most noteworthy.</p>
+
+<p>The manufacture of arms and artillery is carried on to a great
+extent, and the imperial and private docks and shipbuilding
+establishments, notably the Schichau yard, turn out ships of the
+largest size. The town is famous for its amber, beer, brandy and
+liqueurs, and its transit trade makes it one of the most important
+commercial cities of northern Europe. Danzig originally owed its
+commercial importance to the fact that it was the shipping port
+for the corn grown in Poland and the adjacent regions of Russia
+and Prussia; but for some few years past this trade has been
+slipping away from her. On the other hand, her trade in timber
+and sugar has grown proportionally. Nevertheless energetic
+efforts are being made to check any loss of importance&mdash;first, in
+1898, by a determined attempt to make Danzig an industrial
+centre, manufacturing on a large scale; and secondly, by the
+construction and opening in 1899 of a free harbour at Neufahrwasser
+at the mouth of the Vistula. The industries which it has
+been the principal aim to foster and further develop are shipbuilding
+(naval and marine), steel foundries and rolling mills,
+sugar refineries, flour and oil mills, and distilleries.</p>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;The origin of Danzig is unknown, but it is mentioned
+in 997 as an important town. At different times it was held by
+Pomerania, Poland, Brandenburg and Denmark, and in 1308
+it fell into the hands of the Teutonic knights, under whose
+rule it long prospered. It was one of the four chief towns of
+the Hanseatic League. In 1455, when the Teutonic Order had
+become thoroughly corrupt, Danzig shook off its yoke and submitted
+to the king of Poland, to whom it was formally ceded,
+along with the whole of West Prussia, at the peace of Thorn.
+Although nominally subject to Poland, and represented in the
+Polish diets and at the election of Polish kings, it enjoyed the
+rights of a free city, and governed a considerable territory with
+more than thirty villages. It suffered severely through various
+wars of the 17th and 18th centuries, and in 1734, having declared
+in favour of Stanislus Leszczynski, was besieged and taken by the
+Russians and Saxons. At the first partition of Poland, in 1772,
+Danzig was separated from that kingdom; and in 1793 it came
+into the possession of Prussia. In 1807, during the war between
+France and Prussia, it was bombarded and captured by Marshal
+Lefebvre, who was rewarded with the title of duke of Danzig;
+and at the peace of Tilsit Napoleon declared it a free town, under
+the protection of France, Prussia and Saxony, restoring to it its
+ancient territory. A French governor, however, remained in it,
+and by compelling it to submit to the continental system almost
+ruined its trade. It was given back to Prussia in 1814.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See J. C. Schultz, <i>Danzig und seine Bauwerke</i> (Berlin, 1873);
+Wistulanus, <i>Geschichte der Stadt Danzig</i> (Danzig, 1891); <i>Défense de
+Dantzig en 1813; documents militaires du lieutenant-général Campredon</i>,
+pub. by Auriel (Paris, 1888); Daniel, <i>Deutschland</i> (Leipzig, 1895).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAPHLA<a name="ar123" id="ar123"></a></span> (or <span class="sc">Dafla</span>) <b>HILLS,</b> a tract of hilly country on the
+border of Eastern Bengal and Assam, occupied by an independent
+tribe called Daphla. It lies to the north of the Tezpur and North
+Lakhimpur subdivisions, and is bounded on the west by the Aka
+Hills and on the east by the Abor range. Colonel Dalton in
+<i>The Ethnology of Bengal</i> considers the Daphlas to be closely allied
+to the hill Miris, and they are akin to and intermarry with the
+Abors. They have a reputation for cowardice, and as politically
+they are disunited, they are at the mercy of the Akas, their
+less numerous but more warlike neighbours on the west. Their
+clothing is scanty, and its most distinguishing feature is a cane
+cap with a fringe of bearskin or feathers, which gives them a very
+curious appearance. The men wear their hair in a plait, which is
+coiled into a ball on the forehead, to which they fasten their
+caps with a long skewer. In 1872 a party of independent
+Daphlas suddenly attacked a colony of their own tribesmen, who
+had settled at Amtola in British territory, and carried away forty-four
+captives to the hills. This led to the Daphla expedition of
+1874, when a force of 1000 troops released the prisoners and
+reduced the tribe to submission. According to the census of 1901
+the Daphlas in British territory numbered 954, the tribal country
+not being enumerated.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAPHNAE<a name="ar124" id="ar124"></a></span> (Tahpanhes, Taphne; mod. <i>Defenneh</i>), an ancient
+fortress near the Syrian frontier of Egypt, on the Pelusian arm of
+the Nile. Here King Psammetichus established a garrison of
+foreign mercenaries, mostly Carians and Ionian Greeks (Herodotus
+ii. 154). After the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadrezzar
+in 588 B.C., the Jewish fugitives, of whom Jeremiah was one, came
+to Tahpanhes. When Naucratis was given by Amasis II. the
+monopoly of Greek traffic, the Greeks were all removed from
+Daphnae, and the place never recovered its prosperity; in
+Herodotus&rsquo;s time the deserted remains of the docks and buildings
+were visible. The site was discovered by Prof. W. M. Flinders
+Petrie in 1886; the name &ldquo;Castle of the Jew&rsquo;s Daughter&rdquo;
+seems to preserve the tradition of the Jewish refugees. There is
+a massive fort and enclosure; the chief discovery was a large
+number of fragments of pottery, which are of great importance
+for the chronology of vase-painting, since they must belong to
+the time between Psammetichus and Amasis, i.e. the end of the
+7th or the beginning of the 6th century B.C. They show the
+characteristics of Ionian art, but their shapes and other details
+testify to their local manufacture.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See W. M. F. Petrie, <i>Tanis II., Nebesheh, and Defenneh</i> (4th Memoir
+of the Egypt Exploration Fund, 1888).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(E. Gr.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAPHNE<a name="ar125" id="ar125"></a></span> (Gr. for a laurel tree), in Greek mythology, the
+daughter of the Arcadian river-god Ladon or the Thessalian
+Peneus, or of the Laconian Amyclas. She was beloved by Apollo,
+and when pursued by him was changed by her mother Gaea into
+a laurel tree sacred to the god (Ovid, <i>Metam.</i> i. 452-567). In
+the Peloponnesian legends, another suitor of Daphne, Leucippus,
+son of Oenomaüs of Pisa, disguised himself as a girl and joined her
+companions. His sex was discovered while bathing, and he was
+slain by the nymphs (Pausanias viii. 20; Parthenius, <i>Erotica</i>, 15).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAPHNE,<a name="ar126" id="ar126"></a></span> in botany, a genus of shrubs, belonging to the
+natural order Thymelaeaceae, and containing about forty species,
+natives of Europe and temperate Asia. <i>D. Laureola</i>, spurge
+laurel, a small evergreen shrub with green flowers in the leaf axils
+towards the ends of the branches and ovoid black very poisonous
+berries, is found in England in copses and on hedge-banks in stiff
+soils. <i>D. Mezereum</i>, mezereon, a rather larger shrub, 2 to 4 ft.
+high, has deciduous leaves, and bears fragrant pink flowers in
+clusters in the axils of last season&rsquo;s leaves, in early spring before
+the foliage. The bright red ovoid berries are cathartic, the whole
+plant is acrid and poisonous, and the bark is used medicinally.
+It is a native of Europe and north Asia, and found apparently wild
+in copses and woods in Britain. It is a well-known garden plant,
+and several other species of the genus are cultivated in the open
+air and as greenhouse plants. <i>D. Cneorum</i> (Europe) is a hardy
+evergreen trailing shrub, with bright pink sweet-scented flowers.
+<i>D. pontica</i> (Eastern Europe) is a hardy spreading evergreen
+with greenish-yellow fragrant flowers. <i>D. indica</i> (China) and
+<i>D. japonica</i> (Japan) are greenhouse evergreens with respectively
+red or white and pinkish-purple flowers.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAPHNEPHORIA,<a name="ar127" id="ar127"></a></span> a festival held every ninth year at Thebes
+in Boeotia in honour of Apollo Ismenius or Galaxius. It consisted
+of a procession in which the chief figure was a boy of good family
+and noble appearance, whose father and mother must be alive.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page826" id="page826"></a>826</span>
+Immediately in front of this boy, who was called Daphnephoros
+(laurel bearer), walked one of his nearest relatives, carrying an
+olive branch hung with laurel and flowers and having on the
+upper end a bronze ball from which hung several smaller balls.
+Another smaller ball was placed on the middle of the branch or
+pole (called <span class="grk" title="kôpô">&#954;&#969;&#960;&#974;</span>), which was then twined round with purple
+ribbons, and at the lower end with saffron ribbons. These balls
+were said to indicate the sun, stars and moon, while the ribbons
+referred to the days of the year, being 365 in number. The Daphnephoros,
+wearing a golden crown, or a wreath of laurel, richly
+dressed and partly holding the pole, was followed by a chorus of
+maidens carrying suppliant branches and singing a hymn to the
+god. The Daphnephoros dedicated a bronze tripod in the temple
+of Apollo, and Pausanias (ix. 10. 4) mentions the tripod dedicated
+there by Amphitryon when his son Heracles had been Daphnephoros.
+The festival is described by Proclus (in Photius <i>cod.</i> 239).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See also A. Mommsen, <i>Feste der Stadt Athen</i> (1898); C. O. Müller,
+<i>Orchomenos</i> (1844); article in Daremberg and Saglio&rsquo;s <i>Dictionnaire
+des antiquités</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAPHNIS,<a name="ar128" id="ar128"></a></span> the legendary hero of the shepherds of Sicily, and
+reputed inventor of bucolic poetry. The chief authorities for his
+story are Diodorus Siculus, Aelian and Theocritus. According
+to his countryman Diodorus (iv. 84), and Aelian (<i>Var. Hist.</i>, x. 18),
+Daphnis was the son of Hermes (in his character of the shepherd-god)
+and a Sicilian nymph, and was born or exposed and found
+by shepherds in a grove of laurels (whence his name.) He was
+brought up by the nymphs, or by shepherds, and became the
+owner of flocks and herds, which he tended while playing on the
+syrinx. When in the first bloom of youth, he won the affection
+of a nymph, who made him promise to love none but her,
+threatening that, if he proved unfaithful, he would lose his eyesight.
+He failed to keep his promise and was smitten with blindness.
+Daphnis, who endeavoured to console himself by playing
+the flute and singing shepherds&rsquo; songs, soon afterwards died. He
+fell from a cliff, or was changed into a rock, or was taken up to
+heaven by his father Hermes, who caused a spring of water to
+gush out from the spot where his son had been carried off. Ever
+afterwards the Sicilians offered sacrifices at this spring as an
+expiatory offering for the youth&rsquo;s early death. There is little
+doubt that Aelian in his account follows Stesichorus (q.v.) of
+Himera, who in like manner had been blinded by the vengeance
+of a woman (Helen) and probably sang of the sufferings of
+Daphnis in his recantation. Nothing is said of Daphnis&rsquo;s blindness
+by Theocritus, who dwells on his amour with Naïs; his
+victory over Menalcas in a poetical competition; his love for
+Xenea brought about by the wrath of Aphrodite; his wanderings
+through the woods while suffering the torments of unrequited love;
+his death just at the moment when Aphrodite, moved by compassion,
+endeavours (but too late) to save him; the deep sorrow,
+shared by nature and all created things, for his untimely end
+(Theocritus i. vii. viii.). A later form of the legend identifies
+Daphnis with a Phrygian hero, and makes him the teacher of
+Marsyas. The legend of Daphnis and his early death may be
+compared with those of Narcissus, Linus and Adonis&mdash;all
+beautiful youths cut off in their prime, typical of the luxuriant
+growth of vegetation in the spring, and its sudden withering away
+beneath the scorching summer sun.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See F. G. Welcker, <i>Kleine Schriften zur griechischen Litteraturgeschichte</i>,
+i. (1844); C. F. Hermann, <i>De Daphnide Theocriti</i> (1853);
+R. H. Klausen, <i>Aeneas und die Penaten</i>, i. (1840); R. Reitzenstein,
+<i>Epigramm und Skolion</i> (1893); H. W. Prescott in <i>Harvard Studies</i>, x.
+(1899); H. W. Stoll in Roscher&rsquo;s <i>Lexikon der Mythologie</i>; and
+G. Knaack in Pauly-Wissowa&rsquo;s <i>Realencyclopädie</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARÁB<a name="ar129" id="ar129"></a></span> (originally <span class="sc">Darábgerd</span>), a district of the province
+of Fars in Persia. It has sixty-two villages, and possesses a hot
+climate, snow being rarely seen there in winter. It produces a
+great quantity of dates and much tobacco, which is considered
+the best in Persia. The town Daráb, the capital of the district,
+is situated in a very fertile plain, 140 m. S.E. of Shiraz. It has
+a population of about 5000, and extensive orchards of orange
+and lemon trees and immense plantations of date-palms. Legend
+ascribes the foundation of the city to Darius, hence its name
+Daráb-gerd (Darius-town). In the neighbourhood there are
+various remains of antiquity, the most important of which
+3½ m. S., is known as the Kalah i Daráb, or citadel of Darius, and
+consists of a series of earthworks arranged in a circle round
+an isolated rock. Nothing, however, remains to fix the date or
+explain the history of the fortification. Another monument in the
+vicinity is a gigantic bas-relief, carved on the vertical face of a
+rock, representing the victory of the Sassanian Shapur I. (Sapor)
+of Persia over the Roman emperor Valerian, A.D. 260.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARBHANGA,<a name="ar130" id="ar130"></a></span> a town and district of British India, in the
+Patna division of Bengal. The town is on the left bank of the
+Little Baghmati river, and has a railway station. Pop. (1901)
+66,244. The town is really a collection of villages that have
+grown up round the residence of the raja. This is a magnificent
+palace, with gardens, a menagerie and a good library. There
+are a first-class hospital, with a Lady Dufferin hospital attached;
+a handsome market-place, and an Anglo-vernacular school.
+The district of Darbhanga extends from the Nepal frontier to the
+Ganges. It was constituted in 1875 out of the unwieldy district
+of Tirhoot. Its area is 3348 sq. m. In 1901 the population was
+2,912,611, showing an increase of 4% in the decade. The district
+consists entirely of an alluvial plain, in which the principal rivers
+are the Ganges, Buri Gandak, Baghmati and Little Baghmati,
+Balan and Little Balan, and Tiljuga. The land is especially fertile
+in the more elevated part of the district S.W. of the Buri Gandak;
+rice is the staple crop, and it may be noted that the cultivator
+in Darbhanga is especially dependent on the winter harvest.
+The chief exports are rice, indigo, linseed and other seeds, saltpetre
+and tobacco. There are several indigo factories and saltpetre
+refineries, and a tobacco factory. The district is traversed by the
+main line of the Bengal &amp; North-Western railway and by branch
+lines, part of which were begun as a famine relief work in 1874.</p>
+
+<p>The maharaja bahadur of Darbhanga, a Rajput, whose ancestor
+Mahesh Thakor received the Darbhanga raj (which includes large
+parts of the modern districts of Darbhanga, Muzaffarpur,
+Monghyr, Purnea and Bhagalpur) from the emperor Akbar early
+in the 16th century, is not only the premier territorial noble of
+Behar but one of the greatest noblemen of all India. Maharaja
+Lachhmeswar Singh Bahadur, who succeeded to the raj in 1860
+and died in 1898, was distinguished for his public services, and
+especially as one of the most munificent of living philanthropists.
+Under his supervision his raj came to be regarded as the model
+for good and benevolent management; he constructed hundreds
+of miles of roads planted with trees, bridged all the rivers, and
+constructed irrigation works on a great scale. His charities were
+without limit; thus he contributed £300,000 for the relief of the
+sufferers from the Bengal famine of 1873-1874, and it is computed
+that during his possession of the raj he expended at least
+£2,000,000 on charities, works of public utility, and charitable
+remissions of rent. For many years he served as a member of the
+legislative council of the viceroy with conspicuous ability and
+moderation of view. As representative of the landowners of
+Berar and Bengal he took an important part in the discussion
+on the Bengal Tenancy Bill. He was succeeded by his brother,
+Maharaja Rameshwar Singh Bahadur, who was born on the 16th
+of January 1860, and on attaining his majority in 1878 was
+appointed to the Indian Civil Service, serving as assistant
+magistrate successively at Darbhanga, Chhapra and Bhagalpur.
+In 1886 he was created a raja bahadur, exempted from attendance
+at the civil courts, and appointed a member of the legislative
+council of Bengal. He was created a maharaja bahadur on his
+succession to the raj in 1898. Like his brother, he was educated
+by an English tutor, and his administration carried on the
+enlightened traditions of his predecessor.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Sir Roper Lethbridge, <i>The Golden Book of India</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">D&rsquo;ARBLAY, FRANCES<a name="ar131" id="ar131"></a></span> (1752-1840), English novelist and
+diarist, better known as <span class="sc">Fanny Burney</span>, daughter of Dr Charles
+Burney (q.v.), was born at King&rsquo;s Lynn, Norfolk, on the 13th of
+June 1752. Her mother was Esther Sleepe, granddaughter of a
+French refugee named Dubois. Fanny was the fourth child in a
+family of six. Of her brothers, James (1750-1821) became an
+admiral and sailed with Captain Cook on his second and third
+voyages, and Charles Burney (1757-1817) was a well-known
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page827" id="page827"></a>827</span>
+classical scholar. In 1760 the family removed to London, and
+Dr Burney, who was now a fashionable music master, took a
+house in Poland Street. Mrs Burney died in 1761, when Fanny
+was only nine years old. Her sisters Esther (Hetty), afterwards
+Mrs Charles Rousseau Burney, and Susanna, afterwards Mrs
+Phillips, were sent to school in Paris, but Fanny was left to
+educate herself. Early in 1766 she paid her first visit to Dr
+Burney&rsquo;s friend Samuel Crisp at Chessington Hall, near Epsom.
+Dr Burney had first made Samuel Crisp&rsquo;s acquaintance about
+1745 at the house of Fulke Greville, grandfather of the diarists,
+and the two studied music while the rest of the guests hunted.
+Crisp wrote a play, <i>Virginia</i>, which was staged by David Garrick
+in 1754 at the request of the beautiful countess of Coventry (née
+Maria Gunning). The play had no great success, and in 1764
+Crisp established himself in retirement at Chessington Hall,
+where he frequently entertained his sister, Mrs Sophia Gast, of
+Burford, Oxfordshire, and Dr Burney and his family, to whom
+he was familiarly known as &ldquo;daddy&rdquo; Crisp.<a name="fa1h" id="fa1h" href="#ft1h"><span class="sp">1</span></a> It was to her
+&ldquo;daddy&rdquo; Crisp and her sister Susan that Fanny Burney addressed
+large portions of her diary and many of her letters. After his
+wife&rsquo;s death in 1767, Dr Burney married Elizabeth Allen, widow
+of a King&rsquo;s Lynn wine-merchant.</p>
+
+<p>From her fifteenth year Fanny lived in the midst of an exceptionally
+brilliant social circle, gathered round her father in Poland
+Street, and later in his new home in St Martin&rsquo;s Street, Leicester
+Fields. Garrick was a constant visitor, and would arrive before
+eight o&rsquo;clock in the morning. Of the various &ldquo;lyons&rdquo; they
+entertained she leaves a graphic account, notably of Omai,
+the Otaheitan native, and of Alexis Orlov, the favourite of
+Catherine II. of Russia. Dr Johnson she first met at her father&rsquo;s
+home in March 1777. Her father&rsquo;s drawing-room, where she met
+many of the chief musicians, actors and authors of the day, was
+in fact Fanny&rsquo;s only school. Her reading, however, was by
+no means limited. Macaulay stated that in the whole of Dr
+Burney&rsquo;s library there was but one novel, Fielding&rsquo;s <i>Amelia</i>;
+but Austin Dobson points out that she was acquainted with the
+abbé Prévost&rsquo;s <i>Doyen de Killérine</i>, and with Marivaux&rsquo;s <i>Vie de
+Marianne</i>, besides <i>Clarissa Harlowe</i> and the books of Mrs
+Elizabeth Griffith and Mrs Frances Brooke. Her diary also
+contains the record of much more strenuous reading. Her stepmother,
+a woman of some cultivation, did not encourage habits
+of scribbling. Fanny, therefore, made a bonfire of her MSS.,
+among them a <i>History of Caroline Evelyn</i>, a story containing an
+account of Evelina&rsquo;s mother. Luckily her journal did not meet
+with the same fate. The first entry in it was made on the 30th of
+May 1768, and it extended over seventy-two years. The earlier
+portions of it underwent wholesale editing in later days, and much
+of it was entirely obliterated. She planned out <i>Evelina</i>, or <i>A
+Young Lady&rsquo;s Entrance into the World</i>, long before it was written
+down. <i>Evelina</i> was published by Thomas Lowndes in the end of
+January 1778, but it was not until June that Dr Burney learned
+its authorship, when the book had been reviewed and praised
+everywhere. Fanny proudly told Mrs Thrale the secret. Mrs
+Thrale wrote to Dr Burney on the 22nd of July: &ldquo;Mr Johnson
+returned home full of the Prayes of the <i>Book</i> I had lent him, and
+protesting that there were passages in it which might do <i>honour</i>
+to Richardson: we talk of it for ever, and he feels ardent after
+the denouement; he could not get <i>rid</i> of the Rogue, he said.&rdquo;
+Miss Burney soon visited the Thrales at Streatham, &ldquo;the most
+consequential day I have spent since my birth&rdquo; she calls the
+occasion. It was the prelude to much longer visits there. Dr
+Johnson&rsquo;s best compliments were made for her benefit, and
+eagerly transcribed in her diary. His affectionate friendship for
+&ldquo;little Burney&rdquo; only ceased with his death.</p>
+
+<p><i>Evelina</i> was a continued success. Sir Joshua Reynolds sat up all
+night to read it, as did Edmund Burke, who came next to Johnson
+in Miss Burney&rsquo;s esteem. She was introduced to Elizabeth
+Montagu and the other bluestocking ladies, to Richard Brinsley
+Sheridan, and to the gay Mrs Mary Cholmondeley, the sister of
+Peg Woffington, whose manners, as described in the diary,
+explain much of <i>Evelina</i>. At the suggestion of Mrs Thrale, and
+with offers of help from Arthur Murphy, and encouragement from
+Sheridan, Fanny began to write a comedy. Crisp, realizing the
+limitations of her powers, tried to dissuade her, and the piece,
+<i>The Witlings</i>, was suppressed in deference to what she called a
+&ldquo;hissing, groaning, catcalling epistle&rdquo; from her two &ldquo;daddies.&rdquo;
+Meanwhile her intercourse with Mrs Thrale proved very exacting,
+and left her little time for writing. She went with her to Bath
+in 1780, and was at Streatham again in 1781. Her next book was
+written partly at Chessington and after much discussion with
+Mr Crisp. <i>Cecilia; or, Memoirs of an Heiress</i>, by the author of
+<i>Evelina</i>, was published in 5 vols. in 1782 by Messrs Payne &amp;
+Cadell (who paid the author £250&mdash;not £2000 as stated by
+Macaulay). If <i>Cecilia</i> has not quite the freshness and charm
+of <i>Evelina</i>, it is more carefully constructed, and contains many
+happy examples of what Johnson called Miss Burney&rsquo;s gift of
+&ldquo;character-mongering.&rdquo; Burke sent her a letter full of high
+praise. But some of her friends found the writing too often
+modelled on Johnson&rsquo;s, and Horace Walpole thought the personages
+spoke too uniformly in character.</p>
+
+<p>On the 24th of April 1783, Fanny Burney&rsquo;s &ldquo;most judicious
+adviser and stimulating critic,&rdquo; &ldquo;daddy&rdquo; Crisp, died. He was
+her devoted friend, as she was to him, &ldquo;the dearest thing on
+earth.&rdquo; The next year she was to lose two more friends. Mrs
+Thrale married Piozzi, and Johnson died. Fanny had met the
+celebrated Mrs Delany in 1783, and she now attached herself to
+her. Mrs Delany, who was living (1785) in a house near Windsor
+Castle presented to her by George III., was on the friendliest
+terms with both the king and queen, and Fanny was honoured
+with more than one royal interview. Queen Charlotte, soon afterwards,
+offered Miss Burney the post of second keeper of the robes,
+with a salary of £200 a year, which after some hesitation was
+accepted. Much has been said against Dr Burney for allowing
+the authoress of <i>Evelina</i> and <i>Cecilia</i> to undertake an office which
+meant separation from all her friends and a wearisome round of
+court ceremonial. On the other hand, it may be fairly urged that
+Fanny&rsquo;s literary gifts were really limited. She had written
+nothing for four years, and apparently felt she had used her
+best material. &ldquo;What my daddy Crisp says,&rdquo; she wrote as early
+as 1779, &ldquo;&rsquo;that it would be the best policy, but for pecuniary
+advantages, for me to write no more,&rsquo; is exactly what I have
+always thought since <i>Evelina</i> was published&rdquo; (<i>Diary</i>, i. 258).
+Her misgivings as to her unfitness for court life were quite
+justified. From Queen Charlotte she received unvarying kindness,
+though she was not very clever with her waiting-maid&rsquo;s
+duties. She had to attend the queen&rsquo;s toilet, to take care of her
+lap-dog and her snuff-box, and to help her senior, Mrs Schwellenberg,
+in entertaining the king&rsquo;s equerries and visitors at tea.
+The constant association with Mrs Schwellenberg, who has been
+described as &ldquo;a peevish old person of uncertain temper and
+impaired health, swaddled in the buckram of backstairs
+etiquette,&rdquo; proved to be the worst part of Fanny&rsquo;s duties. Her
+diary is full of amusing court gossip, and sometimes deals with
+graver matters, notably in the account of Warren Hastings&rsquo;
+trial, and in the story of the beginning of George III.&rsquo;s madness,
+as seen by a member of his household. But the strain told on her
+health, and after pressure both from Fanny and her numerous
+friends, Dr Burney prepared with her a joint memorial asking
+the queen&rsquo;s leave to resign. She left the royal service in July
+1791 with a retiring pension of £100 a year, granted from the
+queen&rsquo;s private purse, and returned to her father&rsquo;s house at
+Chelsea. Dr Burney had been appointed organist at Chelsea
+Hospital in 1783, through Burke&rsquo;s influence.</p>
+
+<p>In 1792 she became acquainted with a group of French exiles,
+who had taken a house, Juniper Hall, near Mickleham, where
+Fanny&rsquo;s sister, Mrs Phillips, lived. On the 31st of July 1793 she
+married one of the exiles, Alexandre D&rsquo;Arblay, an artillery
+officer, who had been adjutant-general to La Fayette. They
+took a cottage at Bookham on the strength, it appears, of Miss
+Burney&rsquo;s pension. In 1793 she produced her <i>Brief Reflections
+relative to the Emigrant French Clergy</i>. Her son Alexandre was
+born on the 18th of December 1794. In the following spring
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page828" id="page828"></a>828</span>
+Sheridan produced at Drury Lane her <i>Edwy and Elgiva</i>, a tragedy
+which was not saved even by the acting of the Kembles and Mrs
+Siddons. The play was never printed. Money was now a serious
+object, and Madame D&rsquo;Arblay was therefore persuaded to issue
+her next novel, <i>Camilla: or A Picture of Youth</i> (5 vols., 1796),
+by subscription. A month after publication Dr Burney told
+Horace Walpole that his daughter had made £2000 by the book,
+and this sum was almost certainly augmented later. It is interesting
+to note that Jane Austen was among the subscribers. Unfortunately
+its literary success was not as great. &ldquo;How I like
+<i>Camilla</i>?&rdquo; wrote Horace Walpole to Miss Hannah More (August
+29th, 1796), &ldquo;I do not care to say how little. Alas! she has
+reversed experience ... this author knew the world and
+penetrated characters before she had stepped over the threshold;
+and, now she has seen so much of it, she has little or no insight
+at all: perhaps she apprehended having seen too much, and kept
+the bags of foul air that she brought from the Cave of Tempests
+too closely tied.&rdquo; Nevertheless <i>Camilla</i> has found judicious
+persons to admire it, notably Jane Austen in <i>Northanger Abbey</i>.
+A second play, <i>Love and Fashion</i>, was actually put in rehearsal in
+1799, but was withdrawn in the next year. In 1801 Madame
+D&rsquo;Arblay accompanied her husband to Paris, where General
+D&rsquo;Arblay eventually obtained a place in the civil service. In
+1812 she returned to England, bringing with her her son Alexandre
+to escape the conscription. In 1814 she published <i>The Wanderer;
+or Female Difficulties</i>. Possibly because readers expected to find
+a description of her impressions of revolutionary France, it had
+a large sale, from which the author realized £7000. Nobody,
+it has been said, ever read <i>The Wanderer</i>. In the end of the
+year General D&rsquo;Arblay came to England and took his wife
+back to France. During the Hundred Days of 1815 she was
+in Belgium, and the vivid account in her Diary of Brussels
+during Waterloo may have been used by Thackeray in <i>Vanity
+Fair</i>. General D&rsquo;Arblay now received permission to settle in
+England. After his death, which took place at Bath on the 3rd
+of May 1818, his wife lived in Bolton Street, Piccadilly. There
+she was visited in 1826 by Sir Walter Scott, who describes her
+(<i>Journal</i>, November 18th, 1826) as an elderly lady with no
+remains of personal beauty, but with a gentle manner and a
+pleasing countenance. The later years of her life were occupied
+with the editing of the <i>Memoirs of Dr Burney, arranged from his
+own Manuscripts, from family papers and from personal recollections</i>
+(3 vols., 1832). Her style had, as time went on, altered for
+the worse, and this book is full of extraordinary affectations.
+Madame D&rsquo;Arblay died in London on the 6th of January 1840
+and was buried at Walcot, Bath, near her son and husband.</p>
+
+<p>Madame D&rsquo;Arblay is still read in <i>Evelina</i>, but her best title to
+the affections of modern readers is the <i>Diary and Letters</i>. The
+small egotisms of the writer do not alienate other readers as they
+did John Wilson Croker. Dr Johnson lives in its pages almost as
+vividly as in those of Boswell, and King George and his wife in a
+friendlier light than in most of their contemporary portraits.
+Croker, in <i>The Quarterly Review</i>, April 1833 and June 1842, made
+two attacks on Madame D&rsquo;Arblay. The first is an unfriendly
+but largely justifiable criticism on the <i>Memoirs of Dr Burney</i>. In
+the second, a review of the first three volumes of the <i>Diary and
+Letters</i>, Croker abused the writer&rsquo;s innocent vanity, and declared
+that, considering their bulk and pretensions, the <i>Diary and
+Letters</i> were &ldquo;nearly the most worthless we have ever waded
+through.&rdquo; These pronouncements drew forth the eloquent
+defence by Lord Macaulay, first printed in <i>The Edinburgh Review</i>,
+January 1843, which, in spite of some inaccuracies and considerable
+exaggeration, has perhaps done more than anything else to
+maintain Madame D&rsquo;Arblay&rsquo;s constant popularity.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;The <i>Diary and Letters of Madame D&rsquo;Arblay</i> was
+edited by her niece, Charlotte Frances Barrett, in 7 vols. (1842-1846).
+The text, covering the years 1778-1840, was edited with preface,
+notes and reproductions of contemporary portraits and other
+illustrations, by Mr Austin Dobson in 6 vols. (1904-1905). This
+<i>Diary</i>, which begins with the publication of <i>Evelina</i>, was supplemented
+in 1889 by <i>The Early Diary of Frances Burney</i> (1768-1778),
+which was in the first instance suppressed as being of purely private
+interest, edited by Mrs Annie Raine Ellis, with an introduction
+giving many particulars of the Burney family. Mrs Ellis also edited
+<i>Evelina</i> for &ldquo;Bohn&rsquo;s Novelist&rsquo;s Library&rdquo; in 1881, and <i>Cecilia</i> in 1882.
+See also Austin Dobson&rsquo;s <i>Fanny Burney</i> (<i>Madame D&rsquo;Arblay</i>) (1903),
+in the &ldquo;English Men of Letters Series.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1h" id="ft1h" href="#fa1h"><span class="fn">1</span></a> His letters to Mrs Gast and another sister, Anne, were edited
+with the title of <i>Burford Papers</i> (1906), by W. H. Hutton.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARBOY, GEORGES<a name="ar132" id="ar132"></a></span> (1813-1871), archbishop of Paris, was
+born at Fayl-Billot in <span class="correction" title="amended from Haut">Haute</span> Marne on the 16th of January 1813.
+He studied with distinction at the seminary at Langres, and was
+ordained priest in 1836. Transferred to Paris as almoner of the
+college of Henry IV., and honorary canon of Notre Dame, he
+became the close friend of Archbishop Affre and of his successor
+Archbishop Sibour. He was appointed bishop of Nancy in 1859,
+and in January 1863 was raised to the archbishopric of Paris.
+The archbishop was a strenuous upholder of episcopal independence
+in the Gallican sense, and involved himself in a controversy
+with Rome by his endeavours to suppress the jurisdiction of the
+Jesuits and other religious orders within his diocese. Pius IX.
+refused him the cardinal&rsquo;s hat, and rebuked him for his liberalism
+in a letter which was probably not intended for publication. At
+the Vatican council he vigorously maintained the rights of the
+bishops, and strongly opposed the dogma of papal infallibility,
+against which he voted as inopportune. When the dogma had
+been finally adopted, however, he was one of the first to set the
+example of submission. Immediately after his return to Paris
+the war with Prussia broke out, and his conduct during the
+disastrous year that followed was marked by a devoted heroism
+which has secured for him an enduring fame. He was active in
+organizing relief for the wounded at the commencement of the
+war, remained bravely at his post during the siege, and refused
+to seek safety by flight during the brief triumph of the Commune.
+On the 4th of April 1871 he was arrested by the communists as
+a hostage, and confined in the prison at Mazas, from which he
+was transferred to La Roquette on the advance of the army of
+Versailles. On the 27th of May he was shot within the prison
+along with several other distinguished hostages. He died in the
+attitude of blessing and uttering words of forgiveness. His body
+was recovered with difficulty, and, having been embalmed, was
+buried with imposing ceremony at the public expense on the
+7th of June. It is a noteworthy fact that Darboy was the
+third archbishop of Paris who perished by violence in the
+period between 1848 and 1871. Darboy was the author of a
+number of works, of which the most important are a <i>Vie de St
+Thomas Becket</i> (1859), a translation of the works of St Denis the
+Areopagite, and a translation of the <i>Imitation of Christ</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See J. A. Foulon, <i>Histoire de la vie et des &oelig;uvres de Mgr. Darboy</i>
+(Paris, 1889), and J. Guillermin, <i>Vie de Mgr. Darboy</i> (Paris, 1888),
+biographies written from the clerical standpoint, which have called
+forth a number of pamphlets in reply.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARCY, THOMAS DARCY,<a name="ar133" id="ar133"></a></span> <span class="sc">Baron</span> (1467-1537), English
+soldier, was a son of Sir William Darcy (d. 1488), and belonged to
+a family which was seated at Templehurst in Yorkshire. In early
+life he served, both as a soldier and a diplomatist, in Scotland and
+on the Scottish borders, where he was captain of Berwick; and
+in 1505, having been created Baron Darcy, he was made warden
+of the east marches towards Scotland. In 1511 Darcy led some
+troops to Spain to help Ferdinand and Isabella against the
+Moors, but he returned almost at once to England, and was with
+Henry VIII. on his French campaign two years later. One of the
+most influential noblemen in the north of England, where he held
+several important offices, Darcy was also a member of the royal
+council, dividing his time between state duties in London and a
+more active life in the north. He showed great zeal in preparing
+accusations against his former friend, Cardinal Wolsey; however,
+after the cardinal&rsquo;s fall his words and actions caused him
+to be suspected by Henry VIII. Disliking the separation from
+Rome, Darcy asserted that matrimonial cases were matters for
+the decision of the spiritual power, and he was soon communicating
+with Eustace Chapuys, the ambassador of the emperor
+Charles V., about an invasion of England in the interests of the
+Roman Catholics. Detained in London against his will by the
+king, he was not allowed to return to Yorkshire until late in
+1535, and about a year after his arrival in the north the rising
+known as the Pilgrimage of Grace broke out. For a short time
+Darcy defended Pontefract Castle against the rebels, but soon
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page829" id="page829"></a>829</span>
+he surrendered to them this stronghold, which he could certainly
+have held a little longer, and was with them at Doncaster, being
+regarded as one of their leaders. Upon the dispersal of the insurgents
+Darcy was pardoned, but he pleaded illness when
+Henry requested him to proceed to London. He may have
+assisted to suppress the rising which was renewed under Sir
+Francis Bigod early in 1537, but the king believed, probably with
+good reason, that he was guilty of fresh treasons, and he was
+seized and hurried to London. During his imprisonment he
+uttered his famous remark about Thomas Cromwell:&mdash;&ldquo;Cromwell,
+it is thou that art the very original and chief causer of all
+this rebellion and mischief, ... and I trust that or thou die,
+though thou wouldst procure all the noblemen&rsquo;s heads within the
+realm to be stricken off, yet shall there one head remain that shall
+strike off thy head.&rdquo; Tried by his peers, Darcy was found guilty of
+treason, and was beheaded on the 20th of June 1537. In 1548 his
+barony was revived in favour of his son George (d. 1557), but it
+became extinct on the death of George&rsquo;s descendant John in 1635.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARDANELLES<a name="ar134" id="ar134"></a></span> (Turk. <i>Bahr-Sefed Boghazi</i>), the strait, in
+ancient times called the Hellespont (q.v.), uniting the Sea of
+Marmora with the Aegean, so called from the two castles which
+protect the narrowest part and preserve the name of the city of
+Dardanus in the Troad, famous for the treaty between Sulla and
+Mithradates in 84 B.C. The shores of the strait are formed by the
+peninsula of Gallipoli on the N.W. and by the mainland of Asia
+Minor on the S.E.; it extends for a distance of about 47 m. with
+an average breadth of 3 or 4 m. At the Aegean extremity stand
+the castles of Sedil Bahr and Kum Kaleh respectively in Europe
+and Asia; and near the Marmora extremity are situated the
+important town of Gallipoli (Callipolis) on the northern side, and
+the less important though equally famous Lamsaki or Lapsaki
+(Lampsacus) on the southern. The two castles of the Dardanelles
+<i>par excellence</i> are Chanak-Kalehsi, Sultanieh-Kalehsi, or
+the Old Castle of Anatolia, and Kilid-Bahr, or the Old Castle of
+Rumelia, which were long but erroneously identified with Sestos
+and Abydos now located farther to the north. The strait of the
+Dardanelles is famous in history for the passage of Xerxes by
+means of a bridge of boats, and for the similar exploit on the part
+of Alexander. It is famous also from the story of Hero and
+Leander, and from Lord Byron&rsquo;s successful attempt (repeated by
+others) to rival the ancient swimmer. Strategically the Dardanelles
+is a point of great importance, since it commands the
+approach to Constantinople from the Mediterranean. The
+passage of the strait is easily defended, but in 1807 the English
+admiral (Sir) J. T. Duckworth made his way past all the fortresses
+into the Sea of Marmora. The treaty of July 1841, confirmed by
+the Paris peace of 1856, prescribed that no foreign ship of war
+might enter the strait except by Turkish permission, and even
+merchant vessels are only allowed to pass the castle of Chanak-Kalehsi
+during the day.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Choiseul-Gouffier, <i>Voyage pittoresque</i> (Paris, 1842); Murray&rsquo;s
+<i>Handbook for Constantinople</i> (London, 1900).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARDANELLES<a name="ar135" id="ar135"></a></span> (Turk. <i>Sultanieh Kalehsi</i>, or <i>Chanak Kalehsi</i>),
+the chief town and seat of government of the lesser Turkish
+province of Bigha, Asia Minor. It is situated at the mouth of the
+Rhodius, and at the narrowest part of the strait of the Dardanelles,
+where its span is but a mile across. Its recent growth has
+been rapid, and it possesses a lyceum, a military hospital, a public
+garden, a theatre, quays and water-works. Exclusive of the
+garrison, the population is estimated at 13,000, of whom one-half
+are Turkish, and the remainder Greek, Jewish, Armenian and
+European. The town contains many mosques, Greek, Armenian
+and Catholic churches, and a synagogue. There is a resident
+Greek bishop. The civil governor, and the military commandants
+of the numerous fortresses on each side of the strait, are
+stationed here. Many important works have been added to
+the defences. The Ottoman fleet is stationed at Nagara (anc.
+<i>Abydos</i>). The average annual number of merchant vessels
+passing the strait is 12,000 and the regular commercial vessels
+calling at the port of Dardanelles are represented by numerous
+foreign agencies. Besides the Turkish telegraph service, the
+Eastern Telegraph Company has a station at Dardanelles, and
+there are Turkish, Austrian, French and Russian post offices.
+The import trade consists of manufactures, sugar, flour, coffee,
+rice, leather and iron. The export trade consists of valonia
+(largely produced in the province), wheat, barley, beans, chickpeas,
+canary seed, liquorice root, pine and oak timber, wine and
+pottery. Excepting in the items of wine and pottery, the export
+trade shows steady increase. Every year sees a larger area of
+land brought under cultivation by immigrants, and adds to
+the number of mature (i.e. fruit-bearing) valonia trees. Vine-growers
+are discouraged by heavy fiscal charges, and by the low
+price of wine; many have uprooted their vineyards. The pottery
+trade is affected by change of fashion, and the factories are losing
+their importance. The lower quarters of the town were heavily
+damaged in the winter of 1900-1901 by repeated inundations
+caused by the overflow of the Rhodius.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See V. Cuinet, <i>Turquie d&rsquo;Asie</i> (Paris, 1890-1900).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARDANUS,<a name="ar136" id="ar136"></a></span> in Greek legend, son of Zeus and Electra, the
+mythical founder of Dardanus on the Hellespont and ancestor of
+the Dardans of the Troad and, through Aeneas, of the Romans.
+His original home was supposed to have been Arcadia, where
+he married Chryse, who brought him as dowry the Palladium
+or image of Pallas, presented to her by the goddess herself.
+Having slain his brother Iasius or Iasion (according to others,
+Iasius was struck by lightning), Dardanus fled across the sea.
+He first stopped at Samothrace, and when the island was visited
+by a flood, crossed over to the Troad. Being hospitably received
+by Teucer, he married his daughter Batea and became the
+founder of the royal house of Troy.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Apollodorus iii. 12; Diod. Sic. v. 48-75; Virgil, <i>Aeneid</i>, iii.
+163 ff.; articles in Pauly-Wissowa&rsquo;s <i>Realencyclopädie</i> and Roscher&rsquo;s
+<i>Lexikon der Mythologie</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARDISTAN,<a name="ar137" id="ar137"></a></span> a purely conventional name given by scientists
+to a tract of country on the north-west frontier of India. There is
+no modern race called Dards, and no country so named by its
+inhabitants, but the inhabitants of the right bank of the Indus,
+from the Kandia river to Batera, apply it to the dwellers on the
+left bank. In the scientific use of the appellation, Dardistan
+comprises the whole of Chitral, Yasin, Panyal, the Gilgit valley,
+Hunza and Nagar, the Astor valley, the Indus valley from
+Bunji to Batera, the Kohistan-Malazai, i.e. the upper reaches of
+the Panjkora river, and the Kohistan of Swat. The so-called
+Dard races are referred to by Pliny and Ptolemy, and are
+supposed to be a people of Aryan origin who ascended the Indus
+valley from the plains of the Punjab, reaching as far north as
+Chitral, where they dispossessed the Khos. They have left their
+traces in the different dialects, Khoswar, Burishki and Shina,
+spoken in the Gilgit agency.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The question of Dardistan is debated at length in Leitner&rsquo;s
+<i>Dardistan</i> (1877); Drew&rsquo;s <i>Jummoo and Kashmir Territories</i> (1875);
+Biddulph&rsquo;s <i>Tribes of the Hindu-Kush</i> (1880) and Durand&rsquo;s <i>The
+Making of a Frontier</i> (1899). For further details see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Gilgit</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARES PHRYGIUS,<a name="ar138" id="ar138"></a></span> according to Homer (<i>Iliad</i>, v. 9) a Trojan
+priest of Hephaestus. He was supposed to have been the author
+of an account of the destruction of Troy, and to have lived before
+Homer (Aelian, <i>Var. Hist.</i> xi. 2). A work in Latin, purporting to
+be a translation of this, and entitled <i>Daretis Phrygii de excidio
+Trojae historia</i>, was much read in the middle ages, and was then
+ascribed to Cornelius Nepos, who is made to dedicate it to Sallust;
+but the language is extremely corrupt, and the work belongs to a
+period much later than the time of Nepos (probably the 5th
+century A.D.). It is doubtful whether the work as we have it is an
+abridgment of a larger Latin work or an adaptation of a Greek
+original. Together with the similar work of Dictys Cretensis
+(with which it is generally printed) the <i>De excidio</i> forms the chief
+source for the numerous middle age accounts of the Trojan legend.
+(See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Dictys</a></span>; and O. S. von Fleschenberg, <i>Daresstudien</i>, 1908.)</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAR-ES-SALAAM<a name="ar139" id="ar139"></a></span> (&ldquo;The harbour of peace&rdquo;), a seaport of
+East Africa, in 6° 50&prime; S. 39° 20&prime; E., capital of German East
+Africa. Pop. (1909) estimated at 24,000, including some 500
+Europeans. The entrance to the harbor, which is perfectly
+sheltered (hence its name), is through a narrow opening in the
+palm-covered shore. The harbour is provided with a floating
+dock, completed in 1902. The town is built on the northern
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page830" id="page830"></a>830</span>
+sweep of the harbour and is European in character. The streets
+are wide and regularly laid out. The public buildings, which are
+large and handsome, include the government and customs offices
+on the quay opposite the spot where the mail boats anchor, the
+governor&rsquo;s house, state hospital, post office, and the Boma or
+barracks. Adjoining the governor&rsquo;s residence are the botanical
+gardens, where many European plants are tested with a view to
+acclimatization. There are various churches, and government
+and mission schools. In the town are the head offices of the
+Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft, the largest trading company
+in German East Africa. The mangrove swamps at the
+north-west end of the harbour have been drained and partially
+built over.</p>
+
+<p>Until the German occupation nothing but an insignificant
+village existed at Dar-es-Salaam. In 1862 Said Majid, sultan of
+Zanzibar, decided to build a town on the shores of the bay, and
+began the erection of a palace, which was never finished, and of
+which but scanty ruins remain. In 1871 Said Majid died, and his
+scheme was abandoned. In 1876 Mr (afterwards Sir) William
+McKinnon began the construction of a road from Dar-es-Salaam
+to Victoria Nyanza, intending to make of Dar-es-Salaam an
+important seaport. This project however failed. In 1887 Dr
+Carl Peters occupied the bay in the name of the German East
+Africa Company. Fighting with the Arabs followed, and in 1889
+the company handed over their settlement to the German
+imperial government. In 1891 the town was made the administrative
+capital of the colony. It is the starting point of a railway
+to Mrogoro, and is connected by overland telegraph via Ujiji
+with South Africa. A submarine cable connects the town with
+Zanzibar. Dar-es-Salaam was laid out by the Germans on an
+ambitious scale in the expectation that it would prove an
+important centre of commerce, but trade developed very slowly.
+Ivory, rubber and copal are the chief exports. The trade returns
+are included in those of German East Africa (q.v.).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARESTE DE LA CHAVANNE, ANTOINE ELISABETH
+CLÉOPHAS<a name="ar140" id="ar140"></a></span> (1820-1882), French historian, was born in Paris on
+the 28th of October 1820, of an old Lyons family. Educated at
+the École des Chartes, he became professor in the faculty of
+letters at Grenoble in 1844, and in 1849 at Lyons, where he
+remained nearly thirty years. He died on the 6th of August
+1882. His works comprise: <i>Histoire de l&rsquo;administration en
+France depuis Philippe-Auguste</i> (2 vols., 1848); <i>Histoire des
+classes agricoles en France depuis saint Louis jusqu&rsquo;à Louis XVI</i>
+(2 vols., 1853 and 1858), now quite obsolete; and a <i>Histoire de
+France</i> (8 vols., 1865-1873), completed by a <i>Histoire de la
+Restauration</i> (2 vols., 1880), a good summary of the work of
+Veil-Castel, and by a <i>Histoire du Gouvernement de Juillet</i>, a
+dry enumeration of dates and facts. Before the publication of
+Lavisse&rsquo;s great work, Dareste&rsquo;s general history of France was
+the best of its kind; it surpassed in accuracy the work of Henri
+Martin, especially in the ancient periods, just as Martin&rsquo;s in its
+turn was an improvement upon that of Sismondi.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARESTE DE LA CHAVANNE, RODOLPHE MADELEINE
+CLÉOPHAS<a name="ar141" id="ar141"></a></span> (1824-&emsp;&emsp;), French jurist, was born in Paris on the
+25th of December 1824. He studied at the École des Chartes
+and the École de Droit, and starting early on a legal career he
+rose to be counsellor to the court of cassation (1877 to 1900).
+His first publication was an <i>Essai sur François Hotman</i> (1850),
+completed later by his publication of Hotman&rsquo;s correspondence
+in the <i>Revue historique</i> (1876), and he devoted the whole of his
+leisure to legal history. Of his writings may be mentioned <i>Les
+Anciennes Lois de l&rsquo;Islande</i> (1881); <i>Mémoire sur les anciens
+monuments du droit de la Hongrie</i> (1885), and <i>Études d&rsquo;histoire du
+droit</i> (1889). On Greek law he wrote some notable works: <i>Du
+prêt à la grosse chez les Athéniens</i> (1867); <i>Les Inscriptions hypothécaires
+en Grèce</i> (1885), <i>La Science du droit en Grèce: Platon,
+Aristote, Thêophraste</i> (1893), and <i>Étude sur la loi de Gortyne</i> (1885).
+He collaborated with Théodore Reinach and B. Haussoullier
+in their <i>Recueil des inscriptions juridiques grecques</i> (1905), and
+his name is worthily associated with the edition of Philippe de
+Beaumanoir&rsquo;s <i>Coutumes de Beauvaisis</i>, published by Salmon
+(2 vols., 1899, 1900).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARFUR,<a name="ar142" id="ar142"></a></span> a country of east central Africa, the westernmost
+state of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. It extends from about
+10° N. to 16° N. and from 21° E. to 27° 30&prime; E., has an area of some
+150,000 sq. m., and an estimated population of 750,000. It is
+bounded N. by the Libyan desert, W. by Wadai (French Congo),
+S. by the Bahr-el-Ghazal and E. by Kordofan. The two last-named
+districts are <i>mudirias</i> (provinces) of the Anglo-Egyptian
+Sudan. The greater part of the country is a plateau from 2000
+to 3000 ft. above sea-level. A range of mountains of volcanic
+origin, the Jebel Marra, runs N. and S. about the line of the 24° E.
+for a distance of over 100 m., its highest points attaining from
+5000 to 6000 ft. East to west this chain extends about 80 m.
+Eastward the mountains fall gradually into sandy, bush-covered
+steppes. North-east of Jebel Marra lies the Jebel Medob
+(3500 ft. high), a range much distorted by volcanic action, and
+Bir-el-Melh, an extinct volcano with a crater 150 ft. deep. South
+of Jebel Marra are the plains of Dar Dima and Dar Uma; S.W.
+of the Marra the plain is 4000 ft. above the sea. The watershed
+separating the basins of the Nile and Lake Chad runs north and
+south through the centre of the country. The mountains are
+scored by numerous <i>khors</i>, whose lower courses can be traced
+across the tableland. The khors formerly contained large rivers
+which flowed N.E. and E. to the Nile, W. and S.W. to Lake
+Chad, S. and S.E. to the Bahr-el-Ghazal. The streams going
+N.E. drain to the Wadi Melh, a dry river-bed which joins the
+Nile near Debba, but on reaching the plain the waters sink into
+the sandy soil and disappear. The torrents flowing directly east
+towards the Nile also disappear in the sandy deserts. The khors
+in the W., S.W. and S.,&mdash;the most fertile part of Darfur&mdash;contain
+turbulent torrents in the rainy season, when much of the southern
+district is flooded. Not one of the streams is perennial, but in
+times of heavy rainfall the waters of some khors reach the Bahr-el-Homr
+tributary of the Bahr-el-Ghazal. (For some 200 m. the
+Bahr-el-Homr marks the southern frontier of the country.) In
+the W. and S. water can always be obtained in the dry season by
+digging 5 or 6 ft. below the surface of the khors.</p>
+
+<p>The climate, except in the south, where the rains are heavy
+and the soil is a damp clay, is healthy except after the rains.
+The rainy season lasts for three months, from the middle of June
+to the middle of September. In the neighbourhood of the khors
+the vegetation is fairly rich. The chief trees are the acacias
+whence gum is obtained, and baobab (<i>Adansonia digitata</i>);
+while the sycamore and, in the Marra mountains, the <i>Euphorbia
+candelabrum</i> are also found. In the S.W. are densely forested
+regions. Cotton and tobacco are indigenous. The most fertile
+land is found on the slopes of the mountains, where wheat,
+durra, <i>dukhn</i> (a kind of millet and the staple food of the people)
+and other grains are grown. Other products are sesame, cotton,
+cucumbers, water-melons and onions.</p>
+
+<p>Copper is obtained from Hofrat-el-Nahas in the S.E., iron is
+wrought in the S.W.; and there are deposits of rock-salt in
+various places. The copper mines (in 9° 48&prime; N. 24° 5&prime; E.) are
+across the Darfur frontier in the Bahr-el-Ghazal province. The
+vein runs N.W. and S.E. and in places rises in ridges 2 ft. above
+the general level of ground. There is an immense quantity of ore,
+(silicate and carbonate) specimens containing 14% of metal.
+Camels and cattle are both numerous and of excellent breeds.
+Some of the Arab tribes, such as the Baggara, breed only cattle,
+those in the north and east confine themselves to rearing camels.
+Horses are comparatively rare; they are a small but sturdy
+breed. Sheep and goats are numerous. The ostrich, common in
+the eastern steppes, is bred by various Arab tribes, its feathers
+forming a valuable article of trade.</p>
+
+<p><i>Inhabitants.</i>&mdash;The population of Darfur consists of negroes
+and Arabs. The negro <i>For</i>, forming quite half the inhabitants,
+occupy the central highlands and part of the Dar Dima and Dar
+Uma districts; they speak a special language, and are subdivided
+into numerous tribes, of which the most influential are
+the Masabat, the Kunjara and the Kera. They are of middle
+height, and have rather irregular features. The <i>For</i> are described
+as clean and industrious, somewhat fanatical, but generally
+amenable to civilization, and freedom-loving. The <i>Massalit</i> are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page831" id="page831"></a>831</span>
+a negro tribe which, breaking off from the For some centuries
+back, have now much Arab blood, and speak Arabic; while
+the <i>Tunjur</i> are an Arab tribe which must have arrived in the
+Sudan at a very early date, as they have incorporated a large
+For element, and no longer profess Mahommedanism. The <i>Dago</i>
+(<i>Tago</i>) formerly inhabited Jebel Marra, but they have been
+driven to the south and west, where they maintain a certain
+independence in Dar Sula, but are treated as inferiors by the
+For. The Zaghawa, who inhabit the northern borders, are on the
+contrary regarded by the For as their equals, and have all the
+prestige of a race that at one time made its influence felt as far as
+Bornu. Among other tribes may be mentioned the Berti
+and Takruri, the Birgirid, the Beraunas, and immigrants from
+Wadai and Bagirmi, and Fula from west of Lake Chad. Genuine
+Arab tribes, e.g. the Baggara and Homr, are numerous, and they
+are partly nomadic and partly settled. The Arabs have not,
+generally speaking, mixed with the negro tribes. They are great
+hunters, making expeditions into the desert for five or six days
+at a time in search of ostriches.</p>
+
+<p>Slaves, ostrich feathers, gum and ivory used to be the chief
+articles of trade, a caravan going annually by the Arbain
+(&ldquo;Forty Days&rdquo;) road to Assiut in Egypt and taking back
+cloth, fire-arms and other articles. The slave trade has ceased,
+but feathers, gum and ivory still constitute the chief exports of
+the country. The principal imports are cotton goods, sugar and
+tea. There is also an active trade in camels and cattle.</p>
+
+<p>The internal administration of the country is in the hands of the
+sultan, who is officially recognized as the agent of the Sudan
+government. The administrative system resembles that of other
+Mahommedan countries.</p>
+
+<p><i>Towns.</i>&mdash;The capital is El-Fasher, pop. about 10,000, on the
+western bank of the Wadi Tendelty in an angle formed by the
+junction of that wadi with the Wadi-el-Kho, one of the streams
+which flow towards the Bahr-el-Homr. Fasher is the residence
+of the sultan. There are a few fine buildings, but the town
+consists mainly of tukls and box-shaped straw sheds. It is 500 m.
+W.S.W. of Khartum. Dara, a small market town, is 110 m. S.
+of El-Fasher. Shakka is in the S.E. of the country near the
+Bahr-el-Homr,
+and was formerly the headquarters of the slave dealers.</p>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;The Dago or Tago negroes, inhabitants of Jebel
+Marra, appear to have been the dominant race in Darfur in the
+earliest period to which the history of the country goes back.
+How long they ruled is uncertain, little being known of them
+save a list of kings. According to tradition the Tago dynasty
+was displaced, and Mahommedanism introduced, about the 14th
+century, by Tunjur Arabs, who reached Darfur by way of Bornu
+and Wadai. The first Tunjur king was Ahmed-el-Makur, who
+married the daughter of the last Tago monarch. Ahmed reduced
+many unruly chiefs to submission, and under him the country
+prospered. His great-grandson, the sultan Dali, a celebrated
+figure in Darfur histories, was on his mother&rsquo;s side a For, and thus
+was effected a union between the negro and Arab races. Dali
+divided the country into provinces, and established a penal code,
+which, under the title of <i>Kitab Dali</i> or Dali&rsquo;s Book, is still
+preserved, and shows principles essentially different from those
+of the Koran. His grandson Soleiman (usually distinguished by
+the Forian epithet <i>Solon</i>, the Arab or the Red) reigned from 1596
+to 1637, and was a great warrior and a devoted Mahommedan.
+Soleiman&rsquo;s grandson, Ahmed Bahr (1682-1722), made Islam the
+religion of the state, and increased the prosperity of the country
+by encouraging immigration from Bornu and Bagirmi. His rule
+extended east of the Nile as far as the banks of the Atbara.
+Under succeeding monarchs the country, involved in wars with
+Sennar and Wadai, declined in importance. Towards the end of
+the 18th century a sultan named Mahommed Terab led an army
+against the Funj, but got no further than Omdurman. Here he
+was stopped by the Nile, and found no means of getting his army
+across the river. Unwilling to give up his project, Terab remained
+at Omdurman for months. He was poisoned by his wife at the
+instigation of disaffected chiefs, and the army returned to
+Darfur. The next monarch was Abd-er-Rahman, surnamed
+el-Raschid or the Just. It was during his reign that Napoleon
+Bonaparte was campaigning in Egypt; and in 1799 Abd-er-Rahman
+wrote to congratulate the French general on his defeat
+of the Mamelukes. To this Bonaparte replied by asking the
+sultan to send him by the next caravan 2000 black slaves upwards
+of sixteen years old, strong and vigorous. To Abd-er-Rahman
+likewise is due the present situation of the <i>Fasher</i>, or royal township.
+The capital had formerly been at a place called Kobbé.
+Mahommed-el-Fadhl, his son, was for some time under the
+control of an energetic eunuch, Mahommed Kurra, but he ultimately
+made himself independent, and his reign lasted till 1839,
+when he died of leprosy. He devoted himself largely to the
+subjection of the semi-independent Arab tribes who lived in the
+country, notably the Rizighat, thousands of whom he slew. In
+1821 he lost the province of Kordofan, which in that year was
+conquered by the Egyptians. Of his forty sons, the third,
+Mahommed Hassin, was appointed his successor. Hassin is
+described as a religious but avaricious man. In the later part of
+his reign he became involved in trouble with the Arab slave
+raiders who had seized the Bahr-el-Ghazal, looked upon by the
+Darfurians as their especial &ldquo;slave preserve.&rdquo; The negroes of
+Bahr-el-Ghazal paid tribute of ivory and slaves to Darfur, and
+these were the chief articles of merchandise sold by the Darfurians
+to the Egyptian traders along the Arbain road to Assiut. The
+loss of the Bahr-el-Ghazal caused therefore much annoyance to
+the people of Darfur. Hassin died in 1873, blind and advanced in
+years, and the succession passed to his youngest son Ibrahim,
+who soon found himself engaged in a conflict with Zobeir (q.v.),
+the chief of the Bahr-el-Ghazal slave traders, and with an
+Egyptian force from Khartum. The war resulted in the destruction
+of the kingdom. Ibrahim was slain in battle in the autumn
+of 1874, and his uncle Hassab Alla, who sought to maintain the
+independence of his country, was captured in 1875 by the troops
+of the khedive, and removed to Cairo with his family. The
+Darfurians were restive under Egyptian rule. Various revolts
+were suppressed, but in 1879 General Gordon (then governor-general
+of the Sudan) suggested the reinstatement of the ancient
+royal family. This was not done, and in 1881 Slatin Bey (Sir
+Rudolf von Slatin) was made governor of the province. Slatin
+defended the province against the forces of the Mahdi, who were
+led by a Rizighat sheik named Madibbo, but was obliged to
+surrender (December 1883), and Darfur was incorporated in the
+Mahdi&rsquo;s dominions. The Darfurians found Dervish rule as irksome
+as that of the Egyptians had been, and a state of almost
+constant warfare ended in the gradual retirement of the
+Dervishes from Darfur. Following the overthrow of the khalifa
+at Omdurman in 1898 the new (Anglo-Egyptian) Sudan government
+recognized (1899) Ali Dinar, a grandson of Mahommed-el-Fadhl,
+as sultan of Darfur, on the payment by that chief of
+an annual tribute of £500. Under Ali Dinar, who during the
+<i>Mahdia</i> had been kept a prisoner in Omdurman, Darfur enjoyed
+a period of peace.</p>
+
+<p>The first European traveller known to have visited Darfur was
+William George Browne (q.v.), who spent two years (1793-1795)
+at Kobbé. Sheik Mahommed-el-Tounsi travelled in 1803 through
+various regions of Africa, including Darfur, in search of Omar,
+his father, and afterwards gave to the world an account of
+his wanderings, which was translated into French in 1845 by
+M. Perron. Gustav Nachtigal in 1873 spent some months in
+Darfur, and since that time the country has become well
+known through the journeys of Gordon, Slatin and others.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;Browne&rsquo;s account of Darfur will be found in his
+<i>Travels in Africa, Egypt and Syria</i> (London, 1799); Nachtigal&rsquo;s
+<i>Sahara und Sudan</i> gives the results of that traveller&rsquo;s observations.
+The first ten chapters of Slatin Pasha&rsquo;s book <i>Fire and Sword in the
+Sudan</i> (English edition, London, 1896) contain much information
+concerning the country, its history, and a full account of the
+overthrow of Egyptian authority by the Mahdi. See also <i>The
+Anglo-Egyptian Sudan</i> (London, 1905), edited by Count Gleichen,
+and the bibliography given under <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Sudan</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARGAI,<a name="ar143" id="ar143"></a></span> the name of a mountain peak and a frontier station
+in the north-west Frontier Province of India. The mountain peak
+is situated on the Samana Range, and the Kohat border, and is
+famous for the stand made there by the Afridis and Orakzais in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page832" id="page832"></a>832</span>
+the Tirah Campaign. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Tirah Campaign</a></span>.) Dargai station is
+situated on the Peshawar border, and is the terminus of the
+frontier railway running from Nowshera to the Malakand Pass.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARGOMIJSKY, ALEXANDER SERGEIVICH<a name="ar144" id="ar144"></a></span> (1813-1869),
+Russian composer, was born in 1813, and educated in St Petersburg.
+He was already known as a talented musical amateur
+when in 1833 he met Glinka and was encouraged to devote himself
+to composition. His light opera <i>Esmeralda</i> was written in
+1839, and his <i>Roussalka</i> was performed in 1856, but he had but
+small success or recognition either at home or abroad, except
+in Belgium, till the &rsquo;sixties, when he became one of Balakirev&rsquo;s
+circle. His opera <i>The Stone Guest</i> then became famous among
+the progressive Russian school, though it was not performed till
+1872. Dargomijsky died in January 1869. His compositions
+include a number of songs, and some orchestral pieces.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARIAL,<a name="ar145" id="ar145"></a></span> a gorge in the Caucasus, at the east foot of Mt.
+Kasbek, pierced by the river Terek for a distance of 8 m. between
+vertical walls of rock (5900 ft.). It is mentioned in the Georgian
+annals under the names of Ralani, Dargani, Darialani; the
+Persians and Arabs knew it as the Gate of the Alans; Strabo
+calls it <i>Porta Caucasica</i> and <i>Porta Cumana</i>; Ptolemy, <i>Porta
+Sarmatica</i>; it was sometimes known as <i>Portae Caspiae</i> (a name
+bestowed also on the &ldquo;gate&rdquo; or pass beside the Caspian at
+Derbent); and the Tatars call it <i>Darioly</i>. Being the only available
+passage across the Caucasus, it has been fortified since a
+remote period&mdash;at least since 150 B.C. In Russian poetry it has
+been immortalized by Lermontov. The present Russian fort,
+Darial, which guards this section of the Georgian military road,
+is at the northern issue of the gorge, at an altitude of 4746 ft.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARIEN,<a name="ar146" id="ar146"></a></span> a district covering the eastern part of the isthmus
+joining Central and South America. It is mainly within the
+republic of Panama, and gives its name to a gulf of the Carribbean
+Sea. Darien is of great interest in the history of geographical
+discovery. It was reconnoitred in the first year of the 16th
+century by Rodrigo Bastidas of Seville; and the first settlement
+was Santa Maria la Antigua, situated on the small Darien river,
+north-west of the mouth of the Atrato. In 1513 Vasco Nuñez
+de Balboa stood &ldquo;silent upon a peak in Darien,&rdquo;<a name="fa1i" id="fa1i" href="#ft1i"><span class="sp">1</span></a> and saw the
+Pacific at his feet stretching inland in the Gulf of San Miguel;
+and for long this narrow neck of land seemed alternately to proffer
+and refuse a means of transit between the two oceans. The first
+serious attempt to turn the isthmus to permanent account as a
+trade route dates from the beginning of the 18th century, and
+forms an interesting chapter in Scottish history. In 1695 an act
+was passed by the Scottish parliament giving extensive powers
+to a company trading to Africa and the Indies; and this
+company, under the advice of one of the most remarkable
+economists of the period, William Paterson (q.v.), determined to
+establish a colony on the isthmus of Darien as a general emporium
+for the commerce of all the nations of the world. Regarded with
+disfavour both in England and Holland, the project was taken
+up in Scotland with the enthusiasm of national rivalry towards
+England, and the &ldquo;subscriptions sucked up all the money in the
+country.&rdquo; On the 26th of July 1698 the pioneers set sail from
+Leith amid the cheers of an almost envious multitude; and on
+the 4th of November, with the loss of only fifteen out of 1200 men,
+they arrived at Darien, and took up their quarters in a well-defended
+spot, with a good harbour and excellent outlook. The
+country they named New Caledonia, and two sites selected for
+future cities were designated respectively New Edinburgh and
+New St Andrews. At first all seemed to go well; but by and by
+lack of provisions, sickness and anarchy reduced the settlers to
+the most miserable plight; and in June 1699 they re-embarked
+in three vessels, a weak and hopeless company, to sail whithersoever
+Providence might direct. Meanwhile a supplementary
+expedition had been prepared in Scotland; two vessels were
+despatched in May, and four others followed in August. But
+this venture proved even more unfortunate than the former.
+The colonists arrived broken in health; their spirits were crushed
+by the fate of their predecessors, and embittered by the harsh
+fanaticism of the four ministers whom the general assembly of
+the Church of Scotland had sent out to establish a regular
+presbyterial organization. The last addition to the settlement
+was the company of Captain Alexander Campbell of Fonab, who
+arrived only to learn that a Spanish force of 1500 or 1600 men lay
+encamped at Tubacanti, on the river Santa Maria, waiting for the
+appearance of a Spanish squadron in order to make a combined
+attack on the fort. Captain Campbell, on the second day after
+his arrival, marched with 200 men across the isthmus to Tubacanti,
+stormed the camp in the night-time, and dispersed the Spanish
+force. On his return to the fort on the fifth day he found it
+besieged by the Spaniards from the men-of-war; and, after a
+vain attempt to maintain its defence, he succeeded with a few
+companions in making his escape in a small vessel. A capitulation
+followed, and the Darien colony was no more. Of those who
+had taken part in the enterprise only a miserable handful ever
+reached their native land.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See J. H. Burton, <i>The Darien Papers</i> (Bannatyne Club, 1849);
+Macaulay, <i>History of England</i> (London, 1866); and A. Lang, <i>History
+of Scotland</i>, vol. iv. (Edinburgh, 1907).</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1i" id="ft1i" href="#fa1i"><span class="fn">1</span></a> Keats, in his famous sonnet beginning:&mdash;&ldquo;Much have I travelled
+in the realms of gold,&rdquo; of which this is the concluding line, inaccurately
+substitutes Cortez for Balboa.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARIUS<a name="ar147" id="ar147"></a></span> (Pers. <i>D&#257;rayavaush</i>; Old Test. <i>Daryavesh</i>), the
+name of three Persian kings.</p>
+
+<p>1. <span class="sc">Darius the Great</span>, the son of Hystaspes (q.v.). The
+principal source for his history is his own inscriptions, especially
+the great inscription of Behistun (q.v.), in which he relates how he
+gained the crown and put down the rebellions. In modern times
+his veracity has often been doubted, but without any sufficient
+reason; the whole tenor of his words shows that we can rely upon
+his account. The accounts given by Herodotus and Ctesias of
+his accession are in many points evidently dependent on this
+official version, with many legendary stories interwoven, e.g.
+that Darius and his allies left the question as to which of them
+should become king to the decision of their horses, and that
+Darius won the crown by a trick of his groom.</p>
+
+<p>Darius belonged to a younger branch of the royal family of
+the Achaemenidae. When, after the suicide of Cambyses (March
+521), the usurper Gaumata ruled undisturbed over the whole
+empire under the name of Bardiya (Smerdis), son of Cyrus, and
+no one dared to gainsay him, Darius, &ldquo;with the help of Ahura-mazda,&rdquo;
+attempted to regain the kingdom for the royal race.
+His father Hystaspes was still alive, but evidently had not the
+courage to urge his claims. Assisted by six noble Persians, whose
+names he proclaims at the end of the Behistun inscription, he
+surprised and killed the usurper in a Median fortress (October
+521; for the chronology of these times cf. E. Meyer, <i>Forschungen
+zur alten Geschichte</i>, ii. 472 ff.), and gained the crown. But this
+sudden change was the signal for an attempt on the part of all
+the eastern provinces to regain their independence. In Susiana,
+Babylon, Media, Sagartia, Margiana, usurpers arose, pretending
+to be of the old royal race, and gathered large armies around them;
+in Persia itself Vahyazd&#257;ta imitated the example of Gaumata and
+was acknowledged by the majority of the people as the true
+Bardiya. Darius with only a small army of Persians and Medes
+and some trustworthy generals overcame all difficulties, and in
+520 and 519 all the rebellions were put down (Babylon rebelled
+twice, Susiana even three times), and the authority of Darius
+was established throughout the empire.</p>
+
+<p>Darius in his inscriptions appears as a fervent believer in the
+true religion of Zoroaster. But he was also a great statesman and
+organizer. The time of conquests had come to an end; the wars
+which Darius undertook, like those of Augustus, only served the
+purpose of gaining strong natural frontiers for the empire and
+keeping down the barbarous tribes on its borders. Thus Darius
+subjugated the wild nations of the Pontic and Armenian
+mountains, and extended the Persian dominion to the Caucasus;
+for the same reasons he fought against the Sacae and other
+Turanian tribes. But by the organization which he gave to the
+empire he became the true successor of the great Cyrus. His
+organization of the provinces and the fixing of the tributes is
+described by Herodotus iii. 90 ff., evidently from good official
+sources. He fixed the coinage and introduced the gold coinage
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page833" id="page833"></a>833</span>
+of the Daric (which is not named after him, as the Greeks believed,
+but derived from a Persian word meaning &ldquo;gold&rdquo;; in Middle
+Persian it is called <i>zar&#299;g</i>). He tried to develop the commerce of
+the empire, and sent an expedition down the Kabul and the Indus,
+led by the Carian captain Scylax of Caryanda, who explored the
+Indian Ocean from the mouth of the Indus to Suez. He dug a
+canal from the Nile to Suez, and, as the fragments of a hieroglyphic
+inscription found there show, his ships sailed from the
+Nile through the Red Sea by Saba to Persia. He had connexions
+with Carthage (i.e. the <i>Kark&#257;</i> of the Nakshi Rustam inscr.),
+and explored the shores of Sicily and Italy. At the same time
+he attempted to gain the good-will of the subject nations, and for
+this purpose promoted the aims of their priests. He allowed the
+Jews to build the Temple of Jerusalem. In Egypt his name
+appears on the temples which he built in Memphis, Edfu and the
+Great Oasis. He called the high-priest of Saïs, Uzahor, to Susa
+(as we learn from his inscription in the Vatican), and gave him
+full powers to reorganize the &ldquo;house of life,&rdquo; the great medical
+school of the temple of Saïs. In the Egyptian traditions he is
+considered as one of the great benefactors and lawgivers of the
+country (Herod. ii. 110, Diod. i. 95). In similar relations he stood
+to the Greek sanctuaries (cf. his rescript to &ldquo;his slave&rdquo; Godatas,
+the inspector of a royal park near Magnesia, on the Maeander,
+in which he grants freedom of taxes and forced labour to the
+sacred territory of Apollo. See Cousin and Deschamps, <i>Bulletin
+de corresp. hellén.</i>, xiii. (1889), 529, and Dittenberger, <i>Sylloge
+inscr. graec.</i>, 2); all the Greek oracles in Asia Minor and Europe
+therefore stood on the side of Persia in the Persian wars and
+admonished the Greeks to attempt no resistance.</p>
+
+<p>About 512 Darius undertook a war against the Scythians. A
+great army crossed the Bosporus, subjugated eastern Thrace, and
+crossed the Danube. The purpose of this war can only have been
+to attack the nomadic Turanian tribes in the rear and thus to
+secure peace on the northern frontier of the empire. It was based
+upon a wrong geographical conception; even Alexander and his
+Macedonians believed that on the Hindu Kush (which they called
+Caucasus) and on the shores of the Jaxartes (which they called
+Tanais, i.e. Don) they were quite near to the Black Sea. Of
+course the expedition undertaken on these grounds could not but
+prove a failure; having advanced for some weeks into the Russian
+steppes, Darius was forced to return. The details given by Herodotus
+(according to him Darius had reached the Volga!) are quite
+fantastical; and the account which Darius himself had given on a
+tablet, which was added to his great inscription in Behistun, is
+destroyed with the exception of a few words. (See R. W. Macan,
+<i>Herodotus</i>, vol. ii. appendix 3; G. B. Grundy, <i>Great Persian
+War</i>, pp. 48-64; J. B. Bury in <i>Classical Review</i>, July 1897.)</p>
+
+<p>Although European Greece was intimately connected with the
+coasts of Asia Minor, and the opposing parties in the Greek
+towns were continually soliciting his intervention, Darius did not
+meddle with their affairs. The Persian wars were begun by the
+Greeks themselves. The support which Athens and Eretria gave
+to the rebellious Ionians and Carians made their punishment
+inevitable as soon as the rebellion had been put down. But the
+first expedition, that of Mardonius, failed on the cliffs of Mt.
+Athos (492), and the army which was led into Attica by Datis in
+490 was beaten at Marathon. Before Darius had finished his
+preparations for a third expedition an insurrection broke out in
+Egypt (486). In the next year Darius died, probably in October
+485, after a reign of thirty-six years. He is one of the greatest
+rulers the east has produced.</p>
+
+<p>2. <span class="sc">Darius II.</span>, <span class="sc">Ochus.</span> Artaxerxes I., who died in the beginning
+of 424, was followed by his son Xerxes II. But after a
+month and a half he was murdered by his brother Secydianus, or
+Sogdianus (the form of the name is uncertain). Against him rose
+a bastard brother, Ochus, satrap of Hyrcania, and after a short
+fight killed him, and suppressed by treachery the attempt of his
+own brother Arsites to imitate his example (Ctesias <i>ap.</i> Phot. 44;
+Diod. xii. 71, 108; Pausan. vi. 5, 7). Ochus adopted the name
+Darius (in the chronicles called <i>Nothos</i>, the bastard). Neither
+Xerxes II. nor Secydianus occurs in the dates of the numerous
+Babylonian tablets from Nippur; here the dates of Darius II.
+follow immediately on those of Artaxerxes I. Of Darius II.&rsquo;s
+reign we know very little (a rebellion of the Medes in 409 is
+mentioned in Xenophon, <i>Hellen.</i> i. 2. 19), except that he was quite
+dependent on his wife Parysatis. In the excerpts from Ctesias
+some harem intrigues are recorded, in which he played a disreputable
+part. As long as the power of Athens remained intact
+he did not meddle in Greek affairs; even the support which the
+Athenians in 413 gave to the rebel Amorges in Caria would not
+have roused him (Andoc. iii. 29; Thuc. viii. 28, 54; Ctesias
+wrongly names his father Pissuthnes in his stead; an account
+of these wars is contained in the great Lycian stele from Xanthus
+in the British Museum), had not the Athenian power broken down
+in the same year before Syracuse. He gave orders to his satraps
+in Asia Minor, Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus, to send in the
+overdue tribute of the Greek towns, and to begin war with
+Athens; for this purpose they entered into an alliance with
+Sparta. In 408 he sent his son Cyrus to Asia Minor, to carry on
+the war with greater energy. In 404 he died after a reign of
+nineteen years, and was followed by Artaxerxes II.</p>
+
+<p>3. <span class="sc">Darius III.</span>, <span class="sc">Codomannus</span>. The eunuch Bagoas (q.v.),
+having murdered Artaxerxes III. in 338 and his son Arses in 336,
+raised to the throne a distant relative of the royal house, whose
+name, according to Justin x. 3, was Codomannus, and who had
+excelled in a war against the Cadusians (cf. Diod. xvii. 5 ff., where
+his father is called Arsames, son of Ostanes, a brother of
+Artaxerxes). The new king, who adopted the name of Darius,
+took warning by the fate of his predecessors, and saved himself
+from it by forcing Bagoas to drink the cup himself. Already
+in 336 Philip II. of Macedon had sent an army into Asia Minor,
+and in the spring of 334 the campaign of Alexander began. In
+the following year Darius himself took the field against the
+Macedonian king, but was beaten at Issus and in 331 at Arbela.
+In his flight to the east he was deposed and killed by Bessus
+(July 330).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The name Darius was also borne by many later dynasts of
+Persian origin, among them kings of Persis (q.v.), Darius of Media
+Atropatene who was defeated by Pompeius, and Darius, king of
+Pontus in the time of Antony.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(Ed. M.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARJEELING,<a name="ar148" id="ar148"></a></span> a hill station and district of British India, in
+the Bhagalpur division of Bengal. The sanatorium is situated
+367 m. by rail north of Calcutta. In 1901 it had a population of
+16,924. It is the summer quarters of the Bengal government
+and has a most agreeable climate, which neither exceeds 80° F. in
+summer, nor falls below 30° in winter. The great attraction of
+Darjeeling is its scenery, which is unspeakably grand. The view
+across the hills to Kinchinjunga discloses a glittering white wall
+of perpetual snow, surrounded by towering masses of granite.
+There are several schools of considerable size for European boys
+and girls, and a government boarding school at Kurseong. The
+buildings and the roads suffered severely from the earthquake of
+the 12th of June 1897. But a more terrible disaster occurred in
+October 1899, when a series of landslips carried away houses and
+broke up the hill railway. The total value of the property
+destroyed was returned at £160,000.</p>
+
+<p>The district of Darjeeling comprises an area of 1164 sq. m.
+It consists of two well-defined tracts, <i>viz.</i> the lower Himalayas
+to the south of Sikkim, and the <i>tarai</i>, or plains, which extend from
+the south of these ranges as far as the northern borders of
+Purnea district. The plains from which the hills take their rise
+are only 300 ft. above sea-level; the mountains ascend abruptly
+in spurs of 6000 to 10,000 ft. in height. The scenery throughout
+the hills is picturesque, and in many parts magnificent. The two
+highest mountains in the world, Kinchinjunga in Sikkim
+(28,156 ft.) and Everest in Nepal (29,002 ft.), are visible from the
+town of Darjeeling. The principal peaks within the district are&mdash;Phalut
+(11,811 ft.), Subargum (11,636), Tanglu (10,084), Situng
+and Sinchal Pahai (8163). The chief rivers are the Tista, Great
+and Little Ranjit, Ramman, Mahananda, Balasan and Jaldhaka.
+None of them is navigable in the mountain valleys; but the
+Tista, after it debouches on the plains, can be navigated by cargo
+boats of considerable burthen. Bears, leopards and musk deer
+are found on the higher mountains, deer on the lower ranges, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page834" id="page834"></a>834</span>
+a few elephants and tigers on the slopes nearest to the plains.
+In the lowlands, tigers, rhinoceroses, deer and wild hogs are
+abundant. A few wolves are also found. Of small game, hares,
+jungle fowl, peacocks, partridges, snipe, woodcock, wild ducks
+and geese, and green pigeons are numerous in the <i>tarai</i>, and
+jungle fowl and pheasants in the hills. The mahseer fish is found
+in the Tista.</p>
+
+<p>In 1901 the population was 249,117, showing an increase of
+12% since 1891, compared with an increase of 43% in the
+previous decade. The inhabitants of the hilly tract consist to a
+large extent of Nepali immigrants and of aboriginal highland
+races; in the <i>tarai</i> the people are chiefly Hindus and Mahommedans.
+The Lepchas are considered to be the aboriginal
+inhabitants of the hilly portion of the district. They are a fine,
+frank race, naturally open-hearted and free-handed, fond of
+change and given to an out-door life; but they do not seem
+to improve on being brought into contact with civilization. It
+is thought that they are now being gradually driven out of the
+district, owing to the increase of regular cultivation, and to the
+government conservation of the forests. They have no word for
+plough in their language, and they still follow the nomadic form
+of tillage known as <i>jum</i> cultivation. This consists in selecting a
+spot of virgin soil, clearing it of forest and jungle by burning, and
+scraping the surface with the rudest agricultural implements.
+The productive powers of the land become exhausted in a few
+years, when the clearing is abandoned, a new site is chosen, and
+the same operations are carried on <i>de novo</i>. The Lepchas are also
+the ordinary out-door labourers on the hills. They have no caste
+distinctions but speak of themselves as belonging to one of nine
+septs or clans, who all eat together and intermarry with each
+other. In the upper or northern <i>tarai</i>, along the base of the hills,
+the Mechs form the principal ethnical feature. This tribe inhabits
+the deadly jungle with impunity, and cultivates cotton, rice
+and other ordinary crops, by the <i>jum</i> process described above.
+The cultivation of tea was introduced in 1856, and is now a
+large industry. Cinchona cultivation was introduced by the
+government in 1862, and has since been taken up by private
+enterprise. There is a coal mine at Daling. The Darjeeling
+Himalayan railway of 2 ft. gauge, opened in 1880, runs for
+50 m. from Siliguri in the plains on the Eastern Bengal line.</p>
+
+<p>The British connexion with Darjeeling dates from 1816, when,
+at the close of the war with Nepali, the British made over to the
+Sikkim raja the <i>tarai</i> tract, which had been wrested from him and
+annexed by Nepal. In 1835 the nucleus of the present district of
+British Sikkim or Darjeeling was created by a cession of a portion
+of the hills by the raja of Sikkim to the British as a sanatorium.
+A military expedition against Sikkim, rendered necessary in 1850
+by the imprisonment of Dr A. Campbell, the superintendent of
+Darjeeling, and Sir Joseph Hooker, resulted in the stoppage of the
+allowance granted to the raja for the cession of the hill station
+of Darjeeling, and in the annexation of the Sikkim <i>tarai</i> at the foot
+of the hills and of a portion of the hills beyond. In August 1866 the
+hill territory east of the Tista, acquired as the result of the Bhutan
+campaign of 1864, was added to the jurisdiction of Darjeeling.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARLEY, GEORGE<a name="ar149" id="ar149"></a></span> (1795-1846), Irish poet, was born in
+Dublin in 1795. His parents, who were gentle folks of independent
+means, emigrated to America, leaving the boy in charge of his
+grandfather at Springfield, Co. Dublin. He was educated at
+Trinity College, Dublin, graduating in 1820; but an unfortunate
+stammer prevented him from going into the church or to the bar,
+and he established himself in London, where he published his
+first volume of poems, the <i>Errors of Ecstasie</i>, in 1822, and became
+a regular contributor to <i>The London Magazine</i>. He was intimate
+with Cary, the translator of Dante, and with Charles Lamb. In
+1826 he published under the name of &ldquo;Grey Penseval&rdquo; a volume
+of prose tales and sketches, <i>Labour in Idleness</i> (1826), one of
+which, &ldquo;The Enchanted Lyre,&rdquo; is plainly autobiographical.
+<i>Sylvia, or the May Queen</i> (1827, reprint 1892), a fairy opera, met
+with no success, but about 1830 he became dramatic and art
+critic to the <i>Athenaeum</i>. His other works are: <i>Nepenthe</i> (1835,
+reprint 1897), his most considerable poem; introduction to the
+works of Beaumont and Fletcher (1840); with two plays,
+<i>Thomas à Becket</i> (1840), and <i>Ethelstan</i> (1841). He died in
+London on the 23rd of November 1846.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Selections from the Poems of George Darley</i>, with an introduction by
+R. A. Streatfield, appeared in 1904. See also the edition by Ramsay
+Colles in the &ldquo;Muses&rsquo; Library&rdquo; (1906).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARLING, GRACE HORSLEY<a name="ar150" id="ar150"></a></span> (1815-1842), British heroine,
+was born at Bamborough, Northumberland, on the 24th of
+November 1815. Her father, William Darling, was the keeper of
+the Longstone (Farne Islands) lighthouse. On the morning of
+the 7th of September 1838, the &ldquo;Forfarshire,&rdquo; bound from
+Hull to Dundee, with sixty-three persons on board, struck on the
+Farne Islands, forty-three being drowned. The wreck was
+observed from the lighthouse, and Darling and his daughter
+determined to try and reach the survivors. They recognized
+that though they might be able to get to the wreck, they would
+be unable to return without the assistance of the shipwrecked
+crew, but they took this risk without hesitation. By a combination
+of daring, strength and skill, the father and daughter reached
+the wreck in their coble and brought back four men and a
+woman to the lighthouse. Darling and two of the rescued men
+then returned to the wreck and brought off the four remaining
+survivors. This gallant exploit made Grace Darling and her
+father famous. The Humane Society at once voted them its gold
+medal, the treasury made a grant, and a public subscription was
+organized. Grace Darling, who had always been delicate, died
+of consumption on the 20th of October 1842.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>Grace Darling, her true story</i> (London, 1880).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARLING,<a name="ar151" id="ar151"></a></span> a river of Australia. It rises in Queensland and
+flows into New South Wales, forming for a considerable distance
+the boundary of the two colonies; in its upper reaches it is
+known as the Barwon, but from Bourke to its junction on the
+Victorian border with the river Murray, it is called the Darling.
+Its length is 1160 m., and with its affluents it drains an area of
+about 200,000 sq. m. During the dry season its course is marked
+by a series of shallow pools, but during the winter, when it is
+subject to sudden floods, it is navigable as far as Bourke for
+steamers of light draft. Excepting a narrow strip on the banks
+of the river, the country through which it passes is, for the most
+part, an arid plain.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARLINGTON,<a name="ar152" id="ar152"></a></span> a market town and municipal and parliamentary
+borough of Durham, England, 232 m. N. by W. of
+London, on the North-Eastern railway. Pop. (1891) 38,060;
+(1901) 44,511. It lies in a slightly undulating plain on the small
+river Skerne, a tributary of the Tees, not far from the main river.
+Its appearance is almost wholly modern, but there is a fine old
+parish church dedicated to St Cuthbert. It is cruciform, and in
+style mainly transitional Norman. It has a central tower surmounted
+by a spire of the 14th century, which necessitated the
+building of a massive stone screen across the chancel arch to
+support the piers. Traces of an earlier church were discovered in
+the course of restoration. Educational establishments include
+an Elizabethan grammar school, a training college for school-mistresses
+(British and Foreign School Society), and a technical
+school. There is a park of forty-four acres. The industries of
+Darlington are large and varied. They include worsted spinning
+mills; collieries, ironstone mines, quarries and brickworks; the
+manufacture of iron and steel, both in the rough and in the form of
+finished articles, as locomotives, bridge castings, ships&rsquo; engines,
+gun castings and shells, &amp;c. The parliamentary borough returns
+one member. The town was incorporated in 1867, and the
+corporation consists of a mayor, six aldermen and eighteen
+councillors. Area, 3956 acres.</p>
+
+<p>Not long after the bishop and monks of Lindisfarne had
+settled at Durham in 995, Styr the son of Ulf gave them the vill
+of Darlington (Dearthington, Darnington), which by 1083 had
+grown into importance, probably owing to its situation on the
+road from Watling Street to the mouth of the Tees. Bishop
+William of St Carileph in that year changed the church to a
+collegiate church, and placed there certain canons whom he
+removed from Durham. Bishop Hugh de Puiset rebuilt the
+church and built a manor house which was for many years the
+occasional residence of the bishops of Durham. Boldon Book,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page835" id="page835"></a>835</span>
+dated 1183, contains the first mention of Darlington as a
+borough, rated at £5, while half a mark was due from the dyers
+of cloth. The next account of the town is in Bishop Hatfield&rsquo;s
+Survey (<i>c.</i> 1380), which states that &ldquo;Ingelram Gentill and his
+partners hold the borough of Derlyngton with the profits of the
+mills and dye houses and other profits pertaining to the borough
+rendering yearly four score and thirteen pounds and six shillings.&rdquo;
+Darlington possesses no early charter, but claimed its privileges
+as a borough by a prescriptive right. Until the 19th century it
+was governed by a bailiff appointed by the bishop. The mention
+of dyers in the Boldon Book and Hatfield&rsquo;s Survey probably
+indicates the existence of woollen manufacture. Before the 19th
+century Darlington was noted for the manufacture of linen,
+worsted and flax, but it owes its modern importance to the
+opening of the railway between Darlington and Stockton on the
+27th of September 1825. &ldquo;Locomotive No. 1,&rdquo; the first that
+ever ran on a public railway, stands in Bank Top station, a
+remarkable relic of the enterprise. As part of the palatinate of
+Durham, Darlington sent no members to parliament until 1862,
+when it was allowed to return one member. The fairs and
+markets in Darlington were formerly held by the bishop and
+were in existence as early as the 11th century. According to
+Leland, Darlington was in his time the best market town in the
+bishopric with the exception of Durham. In 1664 the bishop,
+finding that the inhabitants of the town had set up a market &ldquo;in
+the season of the year unaccustomed,&rdquo; i.e. from the fortnight
+before Christmas to Whit Monday, prohibited them from continuing
+it. The markets and fairs were finally in 1854 purchased
+by the local authority, and now belong to the corporation.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARLINGTONIA<a name="ar153" id="ar153"></a></span> (called after William Darlington, an American
+botanist), a Californian pitcher-plant, belonging to the order
+Sarraceniaceae. There is only one species, <i>D. californica</i>, which
+is found at 5000 ft. altitude on the Sierra Nevadas of California,
+growing in sphagnum-bogs along with sundews and rushes.
+The pitcher-like leaves form a cluster, and are 1 to 2 ft. high,
+slender, erect, and end in a rounded hooded top, from which
+hangs a blade shaped like a fish-tail which guards the entrance to
+the pitcher. Insects are attracted to the leaves by the bright
+colouring, especially of the upper part; entering they pass down
+the narrow funnel guided by downward pointing hairs which also
+prevent their ascent. They form a putrefying mass in the bottom
+of the pitcher, and the products of their decomposition are
+presumably absorbed by the leaf for food.</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter"><img style="width:390px; height:522px" src="images/img835.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><i>Darlingtonia californica.</i></td></tr></table>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARLY, MATTHIAS,<a name="ar154" id="ar154"></a></span> 18th-century English caricaturist,
+designer and engraver. This extremely versatile artist not only
+issued political caricatures, but designed ceilings, chimney-pieces,
+mirror frames, girandoles, decorative panels and other
+mobiliary accessories, made many engravings for Thomas
+Chippendale, and sold his own productions over the counter.
+He was apparently an architect by profession. The first publication
+which can be attributed to him with certainty is a coloured
+caricature, &ldquo;The Cricket Players of Europe&rdquo; (1741). In 1754
+he issued <i>A new Book of Chinese Designs</i>, which was intended to
+minister to the passing craze for furniture and household decorations
+in the Chinese style. It was in this year that he engraved
+many of the plates for the <i>Director</i> of Thomas Chippendale. He
+published from many addresses, most of them in the Strand or
+its immediate neighbourhood, and his shop was for a long period
+perhaps the most important of its kind in London. In his book
+<i>Nollekens and his Times</i>, J. T. Smith, writing of Richard Cosway,
+says:&mdash;&ldquo;So ridiculously foppish did he become that Matth.
+Darly, the famous caricature print seller, introduced an etching
+of him in his window in the Strand as the &lsquo;Macaroni Miniature
+Painter.&rsquo;&rdquo; Darly was for many years in partnership with a man
+named Edwards, and together they published many political
+prints, which were originally issued separately and collected
+annually into volumes under the title of <i>Political and Satirical
+History</i>. Darly was a member both of the Incorporated Society
+of Artists and the Free Society of Artists, forerunners of the
+Royal Academy, and to their exhibitions he contributed many
+architectural drawings, together with a profile etching of himself
+(1775). Upon one of these etchings, published from 39 Strand,
+he is described as &ldquo;Professor of Ornament to the Academy of
+Great Britain.&rdquo; Darly&rsquo;s most important publication was <i>The
+Ornamental Architect or Young Artists&rsquo; Instructor</i> (1770-1771),
+a title which was changed in the edition of 1773 to <i>A Compleat
+Body of Architecture, embellished with a great Variety of Ornaments</i>.
+He also issued <i>Sixty Vases by English, French and
+Italian Masters</i> (1767). In addition to his immense mass of
+other productions Darly executed many book plates, illustrated
+various books and cabinet-makers&rsquo; catalogues, and gave lessons
+in etching. His skill as a caricaturist brought him into close
+personal relations with the politicians of his time, and in 1763
+he was instrumental in saving John Wilkes, whose partisan he
+was, from death at the hands of James Dunn, who had determined
+to kill him. Darly, who described himself as &ldquo;Liveryman and
+block maker,&rdquo; issued his last caricature in October 1780, and as
+his shop, No. 39 Strand, was let to a new tenant in the following
+year, it is to be presumed that he had by that time died, or
+become incapable of further work. As a designer of furniture
+Darly travelled in a dozen years or so from the extremes of
+pseudo-Chinese affectation to classical severity of the type
+popularized by the brothers Adam.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARMESTETER, JAMES<a name="ar155" id="ar155"></a></span> (1849-1894), French author and
+antiquarian, was born of Jewish parents on the 28th of March
+1849 at Château Salins, in Alsace. The family name had
+originated in their earlier home of Darmstadt. He was educated
+in Paris, where, under the guidance of Michel Bréal and Abel
+Bergaigne, he imbibed a love for Oriental studies, to which for a
+time he entirely devoted himself. He was a man of vast intellectual
+range. In 1875 he published a thesis on the mythology
+of the <i>Zend Avesta</i>, and in 1877 became teacher of Zend at the
+École des Hautes Études. He followed up his researches with his
+<i>Études iraniennes</i> (1883), and ten years later published a complete
+translation of the <i>Zend Avesta</i>, with historical and philological
+commentary (3 vols., 1892-1893), in the <i>Annales du musée
+Guimet</i>. He also edited the Zend Avesta for Max Müller&rsquo;s <i>Sacred
+Books of the East</i>. Darmesteter regarded the extant texts as far
+more recent than was commonly believed, placing the earliest in
+the 1st century B.C., and the bulk in the 3rd century A.D. In
+1885 he was appointed professor in the Collège de France, and
+was sent to India in 1886 on a mission to collect the popular
+songs of the Afghans, a translation of which, with a valuable
+essay on the Afghan language and literature, he published on
+his return. His impressions of English dominion in India
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page836" id="page836"></a>836</span>
+were conveyed in <i>Lettres sur l&rsquo;Inde</i> (1888). England interested
+him deeply; and his attachment to the gifted English writer,
+A. Mary F. Robinson, whom he shortly afterwards married (and
+who in 1901 became the wife of Professor E. Duclaux, director
+of the Pasteur Institute at Paris), led him to translate her poems
+into French in 1888. Two years after his death a collection of
+excellent essays on English subjects was published in English.
+He also wrote <i>Le Mahdi depuis les origines de l&rsquo;Islam jusqu&rsquo;à
+nos jours</i> (1885); <i>Les Origines de la poésie persane</i> (1888);
+<i>Prophètes d&rsquo;Israël</i> (1892), and other books on topics connected
+with the east, and from 1883 onwards drew up the annual
+reports of the <i>Société Asiatique</i>. He had just become connected
+with the <i>Revue de Paris</i>, when his delicate constitution succumbed
+to a slight attack of illness on the 19th of October 1894.</p>
+
+<p>His elder brother, <span class="sc">Arsène Darmesteter</span> (1846-1888), was a
+distinguished philologist and man of letters. He studied under
+Gaston Paris at the École des Hautes Études, and became
+professor of Old French language and literature at the Sorbonne.
+His <i>Life of Words</i> appeared in English in 1888. He also collaborated
+with Adolphe Hatzfeld in a <i>Dictionnaire général de la langue
+française</i> (2 vols., 1895-1900). Among his most important work
+was the elucidation of Old French by means of the many glosses
+in the medieval writings of Rashi and other French Jews. His
+scattered papers on romance and Jewish philology were collected
+by James Darmesteter as <i>Arsène Darmesteter, reliques scientifiques</i>
+(2 vols., 1890). His valuable <i>Cours de grammaire
+historique de la langue française</i> was edited after his death by
+E. Muret and L. Sudre (1891-1895; English edition, 1902).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>There is an <i>éloge</i> of James Darmesteter in the <i>Journal asiatique</i>
+(1894, vol. iv. pp. 519-534), and a notice by Henri Cordier, with a
+list of his writings, in <i>The Royal Asiatic Society&rsquo;s Journal</i> (January
+1895); see also Gaston Paris, &ldquo;James Darmesteter,&rdquo; in <i>Penseurs
+et poètes</i> (1896, pp. 1-61).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARMSTADT,<a name="ar156" id="ar156"></a></span> a city of Germany, capital of the grand-duchy
+of Hesse-Darmstadt, on a plain gently sloping from the Odenwald
+to the Rhine, 21 m. by rail S.E. from Mainz and 17 m. S. from
+Frankfort-on-Main. Pop. (1905) 83,000. It is the residence of
+the grand-duke and the seat of government of the duchy.
+Darmstadt consists of an old and a new town, the streets of the
+former being narrow and gloomy and presenting no attractive
+features. The new town, however, which includes the greater
+part of the city, contains broad streets and several fine squares.
+Among the latter is the stately Luisenplatz, on which are the house
+of parliament, the old palace and the post office, and in the centre
+of which is a column surmounted by the statue of the grand-duke
+Louis I., the founder of the new town. The square is crossed
+by the Rhein-strasse, the most important thoroughfare in the
+city, leading directly from the railway station to the ducal
+palace. This last, a complex of buildings, dating from various
+centuries, but possessing few points of special interest, is surrounded
+by grounds occupying the site of the old moat.
+Opposite to it, on the north side, and adjoining the pretty palace
+gardens, are the court theatre and the armoury, and a little
+farther west the handsome buildings of the new museum, erected
+in 1905 and containing the valuable scientific and art collections
+of the state, which were formerly housed in the palace: a library
+of 600,000 volumes and 4000 MSS., a museum of Egyptian and
+German antiquities, a picture gallery with masterpieces of old
+German and Dutch schools, a natural history collection and the
+state archives. To the right of the entrance to the palace gardens
+is the tomb of the &ldquo;great landgravine,&rdquo; Caroline Henrietta, wife
+of the landgrave Louis IX., surmounted by a marble urn, the
+gift of Frederick the Great of Prussia, bearing the inscription
+<i>femina sexu, ingenio vir</i>. To the south of the castle lies the old
+town, with the market square, the town hall (lately restored and
+enlarged) and the town church. Of the eight churches (seven
+Evangelical) only the Roman Catholic is in any way imposing.
+There are two synagogues. The town possesses a technical high
+school, having (since 1900) power to confer the degree of doctor
+of engineering, and attended by about 2000 students, two
+gymnasia, a school of agriculture, an artisans&rsquo; school and a
+botanical garden. The chemist, Justus von Liebig, was born
+in Darmstadt in 1803. Among the chief manufactures are the
+production of machinery, carpets, playing cards, chemicals,
+tobacco, hats, wine and beer.</p>
+
+<p>The surroundings of Darmstadt are attractive and contain
+many features of interest. To the east of the town lies the
+Mathildenhöhe, formerly a park and now converted into villa
+residences. Here are the Alice hospital and the pretty Russian
+church, built (1898-1899) by the emperor Nicholas II. of Russia
+in memory of the empress Maria, wife of Alexander II. In the
+vicinity is the Rosenhöhe, with the mausoleum of the ducal house,
+with the tomb of the grand-duchess Alice, daughter of Queen
+Victoria of England.</p>
+
+<p>Darmstadt is mentioned in the 11th century, but in the 14th
+century it was still a village, held by the counts of Katzenelnbogen.
+It came by marriage into the possession of the house of
+Hesse in 1479, the male line of the house of Katzenelnbogen
+having in that year become extinct. The imperial army took
+it in the Schmalkaldic War, and destroyed the old castle. In
+1567, after the death of Philip the Magnanimous, his youngest
+son George received Darmstadt and chose it as his residence.
+He was the founder of the line of Hesse-Darmstadt. Its most
+brilliant days were those of the reign of Louis X. (1790-1830),
+the first grand-duke, under whom the new town was built.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Walther, <i>Darmstadt wie es war und wie es geworden</i> (Darms.
+1865); and Zernin und Wörner, <i>Darmstadt und seine Umgebung</i>
+(Zürich, 1890).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARNLEY, HENRY STEWART<a name="ar157" id="ar157"></a></span> or <b>STUART</b>, <span class="sc">Lord</span> (1545-1567),
+earl of Ross and duke of Albany, second husband of Mary,
+queen of Scots, was the eldest son of Matthew Stewart, earl of
+Lennox (1516-1571), and through his mother Lady Margaret
+Douglas (1515-1578) was a great-grandson of the English king
+Henry VII. Born at Temple Newsam in Yorkshire on the 7th of
+December 1545, he was educated in England, and his lack of
+intellectual ability was compensated for by exceptional skill in
+military exercises. After the death of Francis II. of France in 1560
+Darnley was sent into that country by his mother, who hoped
+that he would become king of England on Elizabeth&rsquo;s death,
+and who already entertained the idea of his marriage with Mary,
+queen of Scots, the widow of Francis, as a means to this end.
+Consequently in 1561 both Lady Margaret and her son, who were
+English subjects, were imprisoned by Elizabeth; but they were
+soon released, and Darnley spent some time at the English court
+before proceeding to Scotland in February 1565. The marriage
+of Mary and Darnley was now a question of practical politics,
+and the queen, having nursed her new suitor through an attack of
+measles, soon made up her mind to wed him, saying he &ldquo;was the
+properest and best proportioned long man that ever she had
+seen.&rdquo; The attitude of Elizabeth towards this marriage is
+difficult to understand. She had permitted Darnley to journey to
+Scotland, and it has been asserted that she entangled Mary into
+this union; but on the other hand she and her council declared
+their dislike of the proposed marriage, and ordered Darnley and
+his father to repair to London, a command which was disobeyed.
+In March 1565 there were rumours that the marriage had already
+taken place, but it was actually celebrated at Holyrood on the
+29th of July 1565.</p>
+
+<p>Although Mary had doubtless a short infatuation for Darnley,
+the union was mainly due to political motives, and in view of the
+characters of bride and bridegroom it is not surprising that
+trouble soon arose between them. Contrary to his expectations
+Darnley did not receive the crown matrimonial, and his foolish
+and haughty behaviour, his vicious habits, and his boisterous
+companions did not improve matters. He was on bad terms
+with the regent Murray and other powerful nobles, who disliked
+the marriage and were intriguing with Elizabeth. Scotland was
+filled with rumours of plot and assassination, and civil war was
+only narrowly avoided. Unable to take any serious part in
+affairs of state, Darnley soon became estranged from his wife.
+He believed that Mary&rsquo;s relations with David Rizzio injured him
+as a husband, and was easily persuaded to assent to the murder
+of the Italian, a crime in which he took part. Immediately
+afterwards, however, flattered and cajoled by the queen, he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page837" id="page837"></a>837</span>
+betrayed his associates to her, and assisted her to escape
+from Holyrood to Dunbar. Owing to these revelations he was
+deserted and distrusted by his companions in the murder, and
+soon lost the queen&rsquo;s favour. In these circumstances he decided
+to leave Scotland, but a variety of causes prevented his departure;
+and meanwhile at Craigmillar a band of nobles undertook to free
+Mary from her husband, who refused to be present at the baptism
+of his son, James, at Stirling in December 1566. The details of
+the conspiracy at Craigmillar are not clear, nor is it certain what
+part, if any, Mary took in these proceedings. The first intention
+may have been to obtain a divorce for the queen, but it was soon
+decided that Darnley must be killed. Rumours of the plot came
+to his ears, and he fled from Stirling to Glasgow, where he fell
+ill, possibly by poisoning, and where Mary came to visit him.
+Another reconciliation took place between husband and wife,
+and Darnley was persuaded to journey with Mary by easy stages
+to Edinburgh. Apartments were prepared for the pair at Kirk
+o&rsquo; Field, a house just inside the city walls, and here they remained
+for a few days. On the evening of the 9th of February 1567 Mary
+took an affectionate farewell of her husband, and went to attend
+some gaieties in Edinburgh. A few hours later, on the morning
+of the 10th, Kirk o&rsquo; Field was blown up with gunpowder.
+Darnley&rsquo;s body was found at some distance from the house, and
+it is supposed that he was strangled whilst making his escape.
+The remains were afterwards buried in the chapel at Holyrood.</p>
+
+<p>Much discussion has taken place about this crime, and the
+guilt or innocence of Mary is still a question of doubt and debate.
+It seems highly probable, however, that the queen was accessory
+to the murder, which was organized by her lover and third
+husband, Bothwell (q.v.). As the father of King James I.,
+Darnley is the direct ancestor of all the sovereigns of England
+since 1603. Personally he was a very insignificant character and
+his sole title to fame is his connexion with Mary, queen of Scots.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>For further information, and also for a list of the works bearing on
+his life, see the article <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Mary, Queen of Scots</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARRANG,<a name="ar158" id="ar158"></a></span> a district of British India, in the province of
+Eastern Bengal and Assam. It lies between the Bhutan and
+Daphla Hills and the Brahmaputra, including many islands in the
+river. The administrative headquarters are at Tezpur. Its area
+is 3418 sq. m. It is for the most part a level plain watered by
+many tributaries of the Brahmaputra. The two subdivisions of
+Tezpur Mangaldai differ greatly in character. Tezpur is part of
+Upper Assam and shares in the prosperity which tea cultivation
+has brought to that part of the valley. In this portion of the
+district there are still large areas of excellent land awaiting
+settlement, and the cultivator finds a market for his produce
+in the flourishing tea-gardens, to which large quantities of
+coolies are imported every year. In Mangaldai, on the other
+hand, most of the good rice land was settled about 1880-1890
+when the subdivision had a population of 146 to the square mile,
+as against 42 for Tezpur; the soil is not favourable for tea, and
+the population is stationary or receding. In 1901 the population
+of the whole district was 337,313, showing an increase of 10% in
+the decade. The principal grain-crop is rice. The principal means
+of communication is by river. A steam tramway of 2½ ft. gauge
+has been opened from Tezpur to Balipara, a distance of 20 m.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Darrang originally formed, according to tradition, part of the
+dominions of Bana Raja, who was defeated by Krishna in a battle
+near Tezpur (&ldquo;the town of blood&rdquo;). The massive granite ruins
+found near by prove that the place must have been the seat of
+powerful and civilized rulers. In the 16th century Darrang was
+subject to the Koch king of Kamarupa, Nar Narayan, and on the
+division of his dominions among his heirs passed to an independent
+line of rajas. Early in the 17th century the raja Bali Narayan
+invoked the aid of the Ahoms of Upper Assam against the Mussulman
+invaders; after his defeat and death in 1637 the Ahoms dominated
+the whole district, and the Darrang rajas sank into petty feudatories.
+About 1785 they took advantage of the decay of the Ahom
+kingdom to try and re-establish their independence, but they were
+defeated by a British expedition in 1792, and in 1826 Darrang, with
+the rest of Assam, passed under British control.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARTFORD,<a name="ar159" id="ar159"></a></span> a market town in the Dartford parliamentary
+division of Kent, England, on the Darent, 17 m. E.S.E. of
+London by the South-Eastern &amp; Chatham railway. Pop. of
+urban district (1891), 11,962; (1901) 18,644. The town lies low,
+flanked by two chalky eminences, called East and West Hills.
+It possesses a town hall, a grammar school (1576), and a Martyr&rsquo;s
+Memorial Hall. The most noteworthy building, however, is the
+parish church, restored in 1863, which contains a curious old
+fresco and several interesting brasses, and has a Norman tower.
+The prosperity of the town depends on the important works in its
+vicinity, including powder works, paper mills, and engineering,
+iron, chemical and cement works. One of the first attempts at
+the manufacture of paper in England was made here by Sir John
+Spielman (d. 1607), jeweller to Queen Elizabeth. Dartford was
+the scene, in 1235, of the marriage, celebrated by proxy, between
+Isabella, sister of Henry III., and the Emperor Frederick II.;
+and in 1331 a famous tournament was held in the place by
+Edward III. The same monarch established an Augustinian
+nunnery on West Hill in 1355, of which, however, few remains
+exist. After the Dissolution it was used as a private residence
+by Henry VIII., Anne of Cleves and Elizabeth. The chantry of
+St Edmund the Martyr which stood on the opposite side of the
+town was a part of Edward III.&rsquo;s endowment to the priory, and
+became so famous as a place of pilgrimage, especially for those
+on their way to Canterbury, that the part of Watling Street which
+crossed there towards London was sometimes called &ldquo;St
+Edmund&rsquo;s Way.&rdquo; It was here also that Wat Tyler&rsquo;s insurrection
+began in 1377, and the house in which he resided is shown. On
+Dartford Heath is a lunatic asylum of the London County Council,
+and, at Long Reach, the infectious diseases hospital of the
+Metropolitan Asylums Board. Stone church, 2 m. E. of Dartford,
+mainly late Early English (1251-1274), and carefully restored by
+G. E. Street in 1860, is remarkable; the richness of the work
+within increases from west to east, culminating in a choir arcade
+decorated with work among the finest of its period extant;
+the period is that of the choir of Westminster Abbey, and from a
+comparison of building materials, choir arcades and sculpture
+of foliage, a common architect has been suggested. Greenhithe,
+on the banks of the Thames, has large chalk quarries in its
+neighbourhood, from which lime and cement are manufactured.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARTMOOR,<a name="ar160" id="ar160"></a></span> a high plateau in the south-west of Devonshire,
+England. Its length is about 23 m. from N. to S. and its extreme
+breadth 20 m., the mean altitude being about 1500 ft. The area
+exceeding 1000 ft. in elevation is about 200 sq. m. It is the
+highest and easternmost in a broken chain of granitic elevations
+which extends through Cornwall to the Scilly Isles. The higher
+parts are open, bleak and wild, strongly contrasting with the
+more gentle scenery of the well-wooded lowlands surrounding it.
+Sloping heights rise from the main tableland in all directions,
+crested with broken masses of granite, locally named <i>tors</i>, and
+often singularly fantastic in outline. The highest of these are
+Yes Tor and High Willhays in the north-west, reaching altitudes
+of 2028 and 2039 ft. Large parts of the moor, especially in the
+centre, are covered with morasses; and head-waters of all the
+principal streams of Devonshire (q.v.) are found here. Two main
+roads cross the moor, one between Exeter and Plymouth, and
+the other between Ashburton and Tavistock, intersecting at Two
+Bridges. Both avoid the higher part of the moor, which, for the
+rest, is traversed only in part by a few rough tracks. The central
+part of Dartmoor was a royal forest from a date unknown, but
+apparently anterior to the Conquest. Its woods were formerly
+more extensive than now, but a few small tracts in which dwarf
+oaks are characteristic remain in the lower parts. Previous to
+1337, the forest had been granted to Richard, earl of Cornwall,
+by Henry III., and from that time onward it has belonged to the
+duchy of Cornwall. The districts immediately surrounding the
+moor are called the Venville or Fenfield districts. The origin of
+this name is not clear. The holders of land by Venville tenure
+under the duchy have rights of pasture, fishing, &amp;c. in the forest,
+and their main duty is to &ldquo;drive&rdquo; the moor at certain times
+in order to ascertain what head of cattle are pastured thereon,
+and to prevent trespassing. The antiquarian remains of Dartmoor
+are considered among those of Devonshire.</p>
+
+<p>Dartmoor convict prison, near Princetown, was adapted to its
+present purpose in 1850; but the original buildings were erected
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page838" id="page838"></a>838</span>
+in 1809 for the accommodation of French prisoners. A tract of
+moorland adjacent to the prison has been brought under cultivation
+by the inmates.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See S. Rowe, <i>Perambulation of the ... forest of Dartmoor</i>
+(Plymouth, 1848); J. L. W. Page, <i>Exploration of Dartmoor</i> (London,
+1889); S. Baring-Gould, <i>Book of Dartmoor</i> (London, 1900).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARTMOUTH,<a name="ar161" id="ar161"></a></span> a town in Halifax county, Nova Scotia,
+Canada, on the north-eastern side of Halifax harbour, connected
+by a steam ferry with Halifax, of which it is practically a suburb.
+Pop. (1901) 4806. It contains a large sugar refinery, foundries,
+machine shops, saw mills, skate, rope, nail, soap and sash
+factories.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARTMOUTH,<a name="ar162" id="ar162"></a></span> a seaport, market town, and municipal
+borough in the Torquay parliamentary division of Devonshire,
+England, 27 m. E. of Plymouth. Pop. (1901) 6579. It is
+beautifully situated on the west bank and near the mouth of
+the river Dart, which here forms an almost land-locked estuary.
+The town is connected by a steam ferry with Kingswear on the
+opposite bank, which is served by a branch of the Great Western
+railway. The houses of Dartmouth, many of which are ancient,
+rise in tiers from the shore, beneath a range of steep hills. An
+embankment planted with trees fronts the river. The cruciform
+church of St Saviour is of the 14th and 15th centuries, and
+contains a graceful rood-screen of the 16th century, an ancient
+stone pulpit and interesting monuments. Dartmouth Castle,
+in part of Tudor date, commands the river a little below the
+town. Portions of the cottage of Thomas Newcomen, one of
+the inventors of the steam-engine, are preserved. Dartmouth is a
+favourite yachting centre, and shipbuilding, brewing, engineering
+and paint-making are carried on. Coal is imported, and resold
+to ships calling at the harbour. The borough is under a mayor,
+four aldermen and twelve councillors. Area, 1924 acres.</p>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;Probably owing its origin to Saxon invaders, Dartmouth
+(<i>Darentamuthan</i>, <i>Dertemue</i>) was a seaport of importance
+when Earl Beorn was buried in its church in 1049. From its
+sheltered harbour William II. embarked for the relief of Mans,
+and the crusading squadron set sail in 1190, while John landed
+here in 1214. The borough, first claimed as such in the reign of
+Henry I., was in existence by the middle of the 13th century,
+since a deed of Gilbert Fitz-Stephen, lord of the manor, mentions
+the services due from &ldquo;his burgesses of Dertemue,&rdquo; and a borough
+seal of 1280 is extant. The king in 1224 required the bailiffs and
+good men of Dartmouth to keep all ships in readiness for his
+service, and in 1302 they were to furnish two ships for the Scottish
+expedition, an obligation maintained throughout the century.
+The men of the vill were made quit of toll in 1337, and in
+1342 the town was incorporated by a charter frequently confirmed
+by later sovereigns. Edward III. in 1372 granted that
+the burgesses should be sued only before the mayor and bailiffs,
+and Richard II. in 1393 granted extended jurisdiction and a
+coroner; further charters were obtained in 1604 and 1684. A
+French attack on the town was repulsed in 1404, and in 1485 the
+burgesses received a royal grant of £40 for walling the town
+and stretching a chain across the river mouth. Dartmouth fitted
+out two ships against the Armada, and was captured by both the
+royalists and parliamentarians in the Civil War. It returned two
+representatives to parliament in 1298, and from 1350 to 1832.
+In the latter year the representation was reduced to one, and was
+merged in that of the county in 1868. Manorial markets were
+granted for Dartmouth in 1231 and 1301. These were important
+since as early as 1225 the fleet resorted there for provisions.
+During the 14th and 15th centuries there was a regular trade
+with Bordeaux and Brittany, and complaints of piracies by
+Dartmouth men were frequent.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARTMOUTH COLLEGE,<a name="ar163" id="ar163"></a></span> an American institution of higher
+education, in Hanover, New Hampshire. It is Congregational in
+its affiliations, but is actually non-sectarian. The college is open
+only to men except during the summer session, when women also
+are admitted. Dartmouth embraces, in addition to the original
+college, incorporated in 1769, a medical school, dating from the
+establishment of a professorship of medicine in the college in
+1798; the Thayer school of civil engineering, established in 1867
+by the bequest of Gen. Sylvanus Thayer; and the Amos Tuck
+school of administration and finance, established in 1900 by
+Edward Tuck&mdash;a remarkable feature, as it was the first, and,
+until the establishment at Harvard of a similar graduate school,
+the only commercial school in the country whose work is largely
+post-graduate. The Chandler school of science and the arts was
+founded by Abiel Chandler in 1851, in connexion with Dartmouth,
+and was incorporated into the collegiate department in
+1893 as the Chandler scientific course in the college. From 1866
+to 1893 the New Hampshire college of agriculture and the
+mechanic arts, now at Durham, was connected with Dartmouth.
+The medical school offers a four years&rsquo; course, and each of the
+other two professional schools a two years&rsquo; course, the first year
+of which may, under certain conditions, be counted as the senior
+year of the undergraduate department. The college has a
+beautiful campus or &ldquo;yard&rdquo;; a library of more than 100,000
+volumes, housed in Wilson Hall (1885); instruction halls, residence
+halls&mdash;Thornton and Wentworth (1828), Hallgarten (1874),
+Richardson (1897), and Fayerweather (1900); a gymnasium
+(Bissell Hall, built in 1867); an athletic field, known as Alumni
+Oval; Bartlett Hall (1890-1891), the house of the College Young
+Men&rsquo;s Christian Association; Rollins Chapel (1885); College
+Hall (1901), a social headquarters; an astronomical and meteorological
+observatory (Shattuck Observatory, 1854); the Mary
+Hitchcock hospital (1893), associated with the medical college;
+museums (especially the Butterfield Museum); Culver Hall (1871),
+the chemical laboratory; and Wilder Hall (1899), the physical
+laboratory. The college in 1908 had 100 officers of administration
+and instruction and 1219 students. It is maintained chiefly
+by the proceeds of a productive endowment fund amounting to
+$2,700,000 and by tuition fees ($125 a year for each student).
+The government is entrusted to a board of twelve trustees, five
+of whom are elected upon the nomination of the alumni.</p>
+
+<p>Dartmouth is the outgrowth of Moor&rsquo;s Indian charity school,
+founded by Eleazer Wheelock (1711-1779) about 1750 at
+Lebanon, Connecticut; this school was named in 1755 in honour
+of Joshua Moor, who in this year gave to it lands and buildings.
+In 1765 Samson Occom (<i>c.</i> 1723-1792), an Indian preacher
+and former student of the school, visited England and Scotland
+in its behalf and raised £10,000, whereupon plans were made
+for enlargement and for a change of site to Hanover. In 1769 the
+school was incorporated by a charter granted by George III. as
+Dartmouth College, being named after the earl of Dartmouth,
+president of the trustees of the funds raised in Great Britain.
+The first college building, Dartmouth Hall (closely resembling
+Nassau Hall at Princetown and the University Hall of Brown
+University), was built in 1784-1791 and is still standing, as are
+the typical college church, built in 1796 and enlarged in 1877 and
+1889, and Moor Hall, the second building for Moor&rsquo;s charity
+school, since 1852 called the Chandler building. During the War
+of Independence the support from Great Britain was mostly
+withdrawn. In 1815 President John Wheelock (1754-1817),
+who had succeeded his father in 1779, and was a Presbyterian
+and a Republican, was removed by the majority of the board
+of trustees, who were Congregationalists and Federalists, and
+Francis Brown was chosen in his place. Wheelock, upon his
+appeal to the legislature, was reinstated at the head of a new
+corporation, called Dartmouth University. The state courts
+upheld the legislature and the &ldquo;University,&rdquo; but in 1819 after
+the famous argument of Daniel Webster (q.v.) in behalf of the
+&ldquo;College&rdquo; board of trustees as against the &ldquo;University&rdquo; board
+before the United States Supreme Court, that body decided that
+the private trust created by the charter of 1769 was inviolable,
+and Dr Francis Brown and the old &ldquo;College&rdquo; board took
+possession of the institution&rsquo;s property. This was one of the
+most important decisions ever made by the United States
+Supreme Court.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Frederick Chase, <i>A History of Dartmouth College and the Town
+of Hanover</i> (Cambridge, 1891). For the Dartmouth College Case see
+Shirley, <i>The Dartmouth College Causes</i> (St Louis, Missouri, 1879);
+Kent, <i>Commentaries on American Law</i> (vol. i. Boston, 1884); and
+Joseph Story, <i>Commentaries on the Constitution</i> (vol. ii., Boston, 1891).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page839" id="page839"></a>839</span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARTMOUTH, EARL OF,<a name="ar164" id="ar164"></a></span> an English title borne by the family
+of Legge from 1710 to the present day.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">William Legge</span> (<i>c.</i> 1609-1670), the eldest son of Edward
+Legge (d. 1616), vice-president of Munster, gained some military
+experience on the continent of Europe and then returning to
+England assisted Charles I. in his war against the Scots in 1638.
+He was also very useful to the king during the months which
+preceded the outbreak of the Civil War, although his attempt
+to seize Hull in January 1642 failed. During the war Legge
+distinguished himself at Chalgrove and at the first battle of
+Newbury, and in 1645 he became governor of Oxford. However,
+he only held this position for a few months, as he shared the
+disgrace of Prince Rupert, to whom he was very devoted; but
+he was largely instrumental in putting an end to the quarrel
+between the king and the prince. Legge helped Charles to
+escape from Hampton Court in 1647, and after attending upon
+him he was arrested in May 1648. He was soon released, but
+was again captured in the following year while proceeding to
+Ireland in the interests of Charles II. Regaining his freedom in
+1653, he spent some years abroad, but in 1659 he was once more
+in England inciting the royalists to rise. Legge enjoyed the
+favour of Charles II., who offered to make him an earl. The old
+royalist died on the 13th of October 1670.</p>
+
+<p>Legge&rsquo;s eldest son, <span class="sc">George, Baron Dartmouth</span> (1647-1691),
+served as a volunteer in the navy during the Dutch war of 1665-1667,
+and quickly won his way to high rank. He was also a
+member of the household of the duke of York, afterwards
+James II.; was governor of Portsmouth and master-general of
+the army; in 1678 he commanded as colonel the troop at Nieuport,
+and in 1682 he was created Baron Dartmouth. In 1683 as
+&ldquo;admiral of a fleet&rdquo; he sailed to Tangiers, dismantled the fortifications
+and brought back the English troops, a duty which he
+discharged very satisfactorily. Under James II. Dartmouth
+was master of the horse and governor of the Tower of London;
+and in 1688, when William of Orange was expected, James II.
+made him commander-in-chief of his fleet. Although himself
+loyal to James, the same cannot be said of many of his officers,
+and an engagement with the Dutch fleet was purposely avoided.
+Dartmouth, however, refused to assist in getting James Edward,
+prince of Wales, out of the country, and even reproved the king
+for attempting this proceeding. He then left the fleet and took
+the oath of allegiance to William and Mary, but in July 1691 he
+was arrested for treason, and was charged with offering to hand
+over Portsmouth to France and to command a French fleet.
+Macaulay believed that this accusation was true, but there are
+those who hold that Dartmouth spoke the truth when he protested
+his innocence. Further proceedings against him were
+prevented by his death, which took place in the Tower of London
+on the 25th of October 1691.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Dartmouth&rsquo;s only son, <span class="sc">William</span>, 1st <span class="sc">Earl of Dartmouth</span>
+(1672-1750), succeeded to his father&rsquo;s barony in 1691.
+In 1702 he was appointed a member of the board of trade and
+foreign plantations, and eight years later he became secretary of
+state for the southern department and joint keeper of the signet
+for Scotland. In 1711 he was created viscount Lewisham and
+earl of Dartmouth; in 1713 he exchanged his offices for that of
+keeper of the privy seal, which he held until the end of 1714.
+After a long period of retirement from public life he died on the
+15th of December 1750. Dartmouth&rsquo;s eldest son George, viscount
+Lewisham (<i>c.</i> 1703-1732), predeceased his father. Other sons
+were: Heneage Legge (1704-1759), judge of the court of
+exchequer; Henry Legge (q.v.), afterwards Bilson-Legge; and
+Edward Legge (1710-1747), who served for some time in the navy
+and died on the 19th of September 1747.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">William</span>, 2nd <span class="sc">Earl of Dartmouth</span> (1731-1801), was a son
+of George, viscount Lewisham, and a grandson of the 1st earl,
+whom he succeeded in 1750. For a few months in 1765 and 1766
+he was president of the board of trade and foreign plantations;
+in 1772 he returned to the same office holding also that of
+secretary for the colonies; and in 1775 he became lord privy
+seal. With regard to the American colonies Dartmouth advised
+them in 1777 to accept the conciliatory proposals put forward by
+Lord North, but in 1776 he opposed similar proposals and advocated
+the employment of force. In March 1782 he resigned his
+office as lord privy seal and in 1783 he was lord steward of the
+household; he died on the 15th of July 1801. Dartmouth was a
+friend of Selina, countess of Huntingdon, and his piety and his
+intimacy with the early Methodists won for him the epithet of the
+<i>Psalm-singer</i>. Dartmouth College was named after him, and
+among his papers preserved at Patshull House, Wolverhampton,
+are many letters from America relating to the struggle for
+independence. His sixth son, Sir Arthur Kaye Legge (d. 1835),
+was an admiral of the blue, and his seventh son, Edward Legge
+(d. 1827), was bishop of Oxford.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">George</span>, 3rd <span class="sc">Earl of Dartmouth</span> (1755-1810), the eldest son
+of the 2nd earl, was lord warden of the stannaries and president
+of the board of control; later he was lord steward and then lord
+chamberlain of the royal household. He died on the 1st of
+November 1810, when his eldest son, William (1784-1853),
+became 4th earl. William&rsquo;s son, William Walter (1823-1891),
+became 5th earl in 1853 and was succeeded in 1891 by his son
+William Heneage Legge (b. 1851) as 6th earl of Dartmouth. As
+Lord Lewisham this nobleman was a member of parliament
+from 1878 to 1891, and was vice-chamberlain of the household in
+1885-1886, and again from 1886 to 1892.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARU, PIERRE ANTOINE NOËL BRUNO,<a name="ar165" id="ar165"></a></span> <span class="sc">Count</span> (1767-1829),
+French soldier and statesman, was born at Montpellier
+on the 12th of January 1767. He was educated at the military
+school of Tournon, conducted by the Oratorians, and entered the
+artillery at an early age. His fondness for literature, however,
+soon made itself felt, and he published several slight pieces, until
+the outbreak of the French Revolution called him to a sterner
+occupation. In 1793 he became commissary to the army,
+protecting the coasts of Brittany from projected descents of the
+British, or of French royalists. Thrown into prison on a frivolous
+charge of friendliness to the royalists and England, he was released
+after the fall of Robespierre in the summer of 1794, and rose in
+the service until, in 1799, he became chief commissary to the
+French army serving under Masséna in the north of Switzerland.
+In that position he won repute for his organizing capacity, great
+power of work and unswerving probity&mdash;the last of which
+qualities was none too common in the French armies at that
+time. These exacting tasks did not absorb all his energies. He
+found time, even during the campaign, to translate part of Horace
+and to compose two poems, the <i>Poème des Alpes</i> and the <i>Chant de
+guerre</i>. The latter celebrated in indignant strains the murder
+of the French envoys to the congress of Rastadt.</p>
+
+<p>The accession of Napoleon Bonaparte to power in November
+1799 led to the employment of Daru as chief commissary to the
+Army of Reserve intended for North Italy, and commanded
+nominally by Berthier, but really by the First Consul. Conjointly
+with Berthier and Dejean, he signed the armistice with the
+Austrians which closed the campaign in North Italy in June
+1800. Daru now returned, for a time, mainly to civil life, and
+entered the tribunate, where he ably maintained the principles
+of democratic liberty. On the renewal of war with England, in
+May 1803, he again resumed his duties as chief commissary for
+the army on the northern coasts. It was afterwards asserted
+that, on Napoleon&rsquo;s resolve to turn the army of England against
+Austria, Daru had set down at the emperor&rsquo;s dictation all the
+details of the campaign which culminated at Ulm. The story is
+apocryphal; but Napoleon&rsquo;s confidence in him was evinced by
+his being appointed to similar duties in the Grand Army, which in
+the autumn of 1805 overthrew the armies of Austria and Russia.
+After the battle of Austerlitz, he took part in the drafting of the
+treaty of Presburg. At this time, too, he became intendant-general
+of the military household of Napoleon. In the campaigns
+of 1806-1807 he served, in his usual capacity, in the army which
+overthrew the forces of Russia and Prussia; and he had a share
+in drawing up the treaty of Tilsit (7th of July 1807). After this he
+supervised the administrative and financial duties in connexion
+with the French army which occupied the principal fortresses of
+Prussia, and was one of the chief agents through whom Napoleon
+pressed hard on that land. At the congress of Erfurt, Daru had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page840" id="page840"></a>840</span>
+the privilege of being present at the interview between Goethe
+and Napoleon, and interposed tactful references to the works of
+the great poet. Daru fulfilled his usual duties in the campaign
+of 1809 against Austria. Afterwards, when the subject of the
+divorce of Josephine and the choice of a Russian or of an Austrian
+princess came to be discussed, Daru, on being consulted by
+Napoleon, is said boldly to have counselled his marriage with a
+French lady; and Napoleon, who admired his frankness and
+honesty, took the reply in good part.</p>
+
+<p>In 1811 he became secretary of state in succession to Maret,
+duc de Bassano, and showed his usual ability in the administration
+of the vast and complex affairs of the French empire,
+including the arrangements connected with the civil list and the
+imperial domains. But neither his devotion to civic duty nor to
+the administration of the affairs of the Grand Army could ward
+off disaster. Late in the year 1813 he took up the portfolio of
+military affairs. After the first abdication of Napoleon in 1814,
+Daru retired into private life, but aided Napoleon during the
+Hundred Days. After the second Restoration he became a
+member of the Chamber of Peers, in which he ably defended the
+cause of popular liberty against the attacks of the ultra-royalists.
+He died at Meulan on the 5th of September 1829.</p>
+
+<p>Few men of the Napoleonic empire have been more generally
+admired and respected than Daru. On one occasion when
+he expressed a fear that he lacked all the gifts of a courtier,
+Napoleon replied, &ldquo;Courtiers! They are common enough about
+me; I shall never be in want of them. What I want is an
+enlightened, firm and vigilant administrator; and that is why
+I have chosen you.&rdquo; At another time Napoleon said, &ldquo;Daru is
+good on all sides; he has good judgment, a good intellect, a great
+power for work, and a body and mind of iron.&rdquo; The only
+occasion on which he is known to have sunk beneath the weight
+of his duties was in the course of writing letters at the emperor&rsquo;s
+dictation for the third night in succession.</p>
+
+<p>Of Daru&rsquo;s literary works may be mentioned his <i>Histoire de
+Venise</i>, published at Paris in 7 vols. in 1819; the <i>Histoire de
+Bretagne</i>, in 3 vols. (Paris, 1826); a poetical translation of
+Horace (of which Le Brun remarked: &ldquo;Je ne lis point Daru,
+j&rsquo;aime trop mon Horace&rdquo;); <i>Discours en vers sur les facultés de
+l&rsquo;homme</i> (Paris, 1825), and <i>Astronomie</i>, a didactic poem in six
+cantos (Paris, 1820).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See the &ldquo;Notice&rdquo; by Viennet prefixed to the fourth edition of
+Daru&rsquo;s <i>Histoire de la république de Venise</i> (9 vols., 1853), and three
+articles by Sainte-Beuve in <i>Causeries du lundi</i>, vol. ix. For the many
+letters of Napoleon to Daru see the <i>Correspondance de Napoléon I<span class="sp">er</span></i>
+(32 vols., Paris, 1858-1870).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(J. Hl. R.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARWEN,<a name="ar166" id="ar166"></a></span> a municipal borough in the Darwen parliamentary
+division of Lancashire, England, 20 m. N.W. from Manchester
+by the Lancashire &amp; Yorkshire railway. Pop. (1891) 34,192;
+(1901) 38,212. It lies on the river Darwen, which traverses a
+densely populated manufacturing district, and is surrounded by
+high-lying moors. Darwen is a centre of the cotton trade and
+has also blast furnaces, and paper-making, paper-staining and
+fire-clay works. In the neighbourhood are collieries and stone
+quarries. The market hall is the chief public building; there are
+technical schools, a free library, and two public parks. Darwen
+was incorporated in 1788. The corporation consists of a mayor,
+six aldermen and eighteen councillors.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARWIN, CHARLES ROBERT<a name="ar167" id="ar167"></a></span> (1809-1882), English naturalist,
+author of the <i>Origin of Species</i>, was born at Shrewsbury on the
+12th of February 1809. He was the younger of the two sons and
+the fourth child of Dr Robert Waring Darwin, son of Dr Erasmus
+Darwin (q.v.). His mother, a daughter of Josiah Wedgwood
+(1730-1795), died when Charles Darwin was eight years old.
+Charles Darwin&rsquo;s elder brother, Erasmus Alvey (1804-1881),
+was interested in literature and art rather than science: on the
+subject of the wide difference between the brothers Charles wrote
+that he was &ldquo;inclined to agree with Francis Galton in believing
+that education and environment produce only a small effect on
+the mind of anyone, and that most of our qualities are innate&rdquo;
+(<i>Life and Letters</i>, London, 1887, p. 22). Darwin considered that
+his own success was chiefly due to &ldquo;the love of science, unbounded
+patience in long reflecting over any subject, industry in observing
+and collecting facts, and a fair share of invention as well as of
+common sense&rdquo; (<i>l.c.</i> p. 107). He also says: &ldquo;I have steadily
+endeavoured to keep my mind free so as to give up any hypothesis,
+however much beloved (and I cannot resist forming one on every
+subject), as soon as facts are shown to be opposed to it&rdquo; (<i>l.c.</i>
+p. 103). The essential causes of his success are to be found in this
+latter sentence, the creative genius ever inspired by existing
+knowledge to build hypotheses by whose aid further knowledge
+could be won, the calm unbiassed mind, the transparent honesty
+and love of truth which enabled him to abandon or to modify his
+own creations when they ceased to be supported by observation.
+The even balance between these powers was as important as their
+remarkable development. The great naturalist appeared in the
+ripeness of time, when the world was ready for his splendid
+generalizations. Indeed naturalists were already everywhere
+considering and discussing the problem of evolution, although
+Alfred Russel Wallace was the only one who, independently of
+Darwin, saw his way clearly to the solution. It is true that
+hypotheses essentially the same as natural selection were suggested
+much earlier by W. C. Wells (<i>Phil. Trans.</i>, 1813), and
+Patrick Matthew (<i>Naval Timber and Arboriculture</i>, 1831), but
+their views were lost sight of and produced no effect upon the
+great body of naturalists. In the preparation for Darwin Sir
+Charles Lyell&rsquo;s <i>Principles of Geology</i> played an important part,
+accustoming men&rsquo;s minds to the vast changes brought about by
+natural processes, and leading them, by its lucid and temperate
+discussion of Lamarck&rsquo;s and other views, to reflect upon evolution.</p>
+
+<p>Darwin&rsquo;s early education was conducted at Shrewsbury, first
+for a year at a day-school, then for seven years at Shrewsbury
+School under Dr Samuel Butler (1774-1839). He gained but
+little from the narrow system which was then universal. In 1825
+he went to Edinburgh to prepare for the medical profession, for
+which he was unfitted by nature. After two sessions his father
+realized this, and in 1828 sent him to Cambridge with the idea
+that he should become a clergyman. He matriculated at Christ&rsquo;s
+College, and took his degree in 1831, tenth in the list of those
+who do not seek honours. Up to this time he had been keenly
+interested in sport, and in entomology, especially the collecting
+of beetles. Both at Edinburgh, where in 1826 he read his first
+scientific paper, and at Cambridge he gained the friendship of
+much older scientific men&mdash;Robert Edmond Grant and William
+Macgillivray at the former, John Stevens Henslow and Adam
+Sedgwick at the latter. He had two terms&rsquo; residence to keep after
+passing his last examination, and studied geology with Sedgwick.
+Returning from their geological excursion together in North
+Wales (August 1831), he found a letter from Henslow urging him
+to apply for the position of naturalist on the &ldquo;Beagle,&rdquo; about to
+start on a surveying expedition. His father at first disliked the
+idea, but his uncle, the second Josiah Wedgwood, pleaded with
+success, and Darwin started on the 27th of December 1831, the
+voyage lasting until the 2nd of October 1836. It is practically
+certain that he never left Great Britain after this latter date.
+After visiting the Cape de Verde and other islands of the
+Atlantic, the expedition surveyed on the South American
+coasts and adjacent islands (including the Galapagos), afterwards
+visiting Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia, Tasmania, Keeling
+Island, Maldives, Mauritius, St Helena, Ascension; and Brazil,
+de Verdes and Azores on the way home. His work on the geology
+of the countries visited, and that on coral islands, became the
+subject of volumes which he published after his return, as well
+as his <i>Journal of a Naturalist</i>, and his other contributions to the
+official narrative. The voyage must be regarded as the real
+preparation for his life-work. His observations on the relation
+between animals in islands and those of the nearest continental
+areas, near akin and yet not the same, and between living
+animals and those most recently extinct and found fossil in the
+same country, here again related but not the same, led him even
+then to reflect deeply upon the modification of species. He had
+also been much impressed by &ldquo;the manner in which closely
+allied animals replace one another in proceeding southwards&rdquo;
+in South America. On his return home Darwin worked at his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page841" id="page841"></a>841</span>
+collections, first at Cambridge for three months and then in
+London. His pocket-book for 1837 contains the words: &ldquo;In
+July opened first note-book on Transmutation of Species. Had
+been greatly struck from about the month of previous March
+[while still on the voyage and just over twenty-eight years old]
+on character of South American fossils, and species on Galapagos
+Archipelago. These facts (especially latter) origin of all my
+views.&rdquo; From 1838 to 1841 he was secretary of the Geological
+Society, and saw a great deal of Sir Charles Lyell, to whom he
+dedicated the second edition of his <i>Journal</i>. On the 29th of
+January 1839 he married his cousin, Emma Wedgwood, the
+daughter of Josiah Wedgwood of Maer. They lived in London
+until September 1842, when they moved to Down, which was
+Darwin&rsquo;s home for the rest of his life. His health broke down
+many times in London, and remained precarious during the whole
+of his life. The immense amount of work which he got through
+was only made possible by the loving care of his wife. For eight
+years (1846 to 1854) he was chiefly engaged upon four monographs
+on the recent and fossil Cirripede Crustacea (<i><span class="correction" title="amended from Ray">Roy</span>. Soc.</i>,
+1851 and 1854; <i>Palaeontograph. Soc.</i>, 1851 and 1854). Towards
+the close of this work Darwin became very wearied of it, especially
+of the synonymy. For a time he hoped to start a movement
+which should discourage the habit of appending the name of the
+describer to the name of the species, a custom which he thought
+led to bad and superficial work. From this time he was engaged
+upon the numerous lines of inquiry which led to the great work
+of his life, the <i>Origin of Species</i>, published in November 1859.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after opening his note-book in July 1837 he began to
+collect facts bearing upon the formation of the breeds of domestic
+animals and plants, and quickly saw &ldquo;that selection was the
+keystone of man&rsquo;s success. But how selection could be applied
+to organisms living in a state of nature remained for some time a
+mystery to me.&rdquo; Various ideas as to the causes of evolution
+occurred to him, only to be successively abandoned. He had
+the idea of &ldquo;laws of change&rdquo; which affected species and finally
+led to their extinction, to some extent analogous to the causes
+which bring about the development, maturity and finally death
+of an individual. He also had the conception that species must
+give rise to other species or else die out, just as an individual dies
+unrepresented if it bears no offspring. These and other ideas, of
+which traces exist in his Diary, arose in his mind, together with
+perhaps some general conception of natural selection, during the
+fifteen months after the opening of his note-book. In October
+1838 he read <i>Malthus on Population</i>, and his observations having
+long since convinced him of the struggle for existence, it at once
+struck him &ldquo;that under these circumstances favourable variations
+would tend to be preserved, and unfavourable ones to be
+destroyed. The result of this would be the formation of new
+species. Here, then, I had a theory by which to work.&rdquo; In
+June 1842 he wrote out a sketch, which two years later he
+expanded to an essay occupying 231 pages folio. The idea of
+progressive divergence as an advantage in itself, because the
+competition is most severe between organisms most closely
+related, did not occur to him until long after he had come to
+Down. During the growth of the <i>Origin</i> Sir Joseph Hooker was
+his most intimate friend, and on the 11th of January 1844 he
+wrote: &ldquo;At last gleams of light have come, and I am almost
+convinced (quite contrary to the opinion I started with) that
+species are not (it is like confessing a murder) immutable&rdquo;
+(<i>l.c.</i> ii. 13). In 1855 he began a correspondence with the great
+American botanist Asa Gray, and in 1857 explained his views
+in a letter which afterwards became classical. In 1856, urged by
+Lyell, he began the preparation of a third and far more expanded
+treatise, and had completed about half of it when, on the 18th of
+June 1858, he received a manuscript essay from A. R. Wallace,
+who was then at Ternate in the Moluccas. Wallace wanted
+Darwin&rsquo;s opinion on the essay, which he asked should be forwarded
+to Lyell. Darwin was much startled to find in the essay
+a complete abstract of his own theory of natural selection. He
+forwarded it the same day, writing to Lyell, &ldquo;your words have
+come true with a vengeance&mdash;that I should be forestalled.&rdquo; He
+placed himself in the hands of Lyell and Hooker, who decided to
+send Wallace&rsquo;s essay to the Linnean Society, together with an
+abstract of Darwin&rsquo;s work, which they asked him to prepare,
+the joint essay being accompanied by a preface in the form of an
+explanatory letter written by them to the secretary. The title
+of the joint communication was &ldquo;On the Tendency of Species
+to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and
+Species by Natural Means of Selection.&rdquo; It was read on the 1st
+of July 1858, and appears in the <i>Linn. Soc. Journal</i> (Zoology)
+for that year. In this statement of the theory of natural selection,
+Darwin&rsquo;s part consisted of two sections, the first being extracts
+from his 1844 essay, including a brief account of sexual selection,
+and the second an abstract of his letter to Asa Gray dated
+the 5th of September 1857. This latter, probably his first
+attempt to expound natural selection, cannot be surpassed as a
+clear statement of the theory. Darwin explained at the outset,
+what he insisted on elsewhere, that the facts of adaptation or
+contrivance in nature are the real difficulty to be explained by
+a theory of evolution, the stumbling-block of every previous
+suggestion. Until he could explain &ldquo;the mistletoe, with its
+pollen carried by insects, and seed by birds&mdash;the woodpecker,
+with its feet and tail, beak and tongue, to climb the tree and
+secure insects,&rdquo; he was &ldquo;scientifically orthodox.&rdquo; Nevertheless
+he was led to believe in evolution, apart from any possible
+motive-cause, by &ldquo;general facts in the affinities, embryology,
+rudimentary organs, geological history, and geographical distribution
+of organic beings.&rdquo; He then proceeds to describe the
+manner in which he met the difficulty of adaptation by &ldquo;his
+notions on the means by which Nature makes her species.&rdquo; The
+essentials of the statement are as follows:&mdash;I. Man has made
+his domestic breeds of animals and plants by selection, conscious
+or unconscious, of very slight or greater variations. II. The
+material for selection exists in nature, namely, slight variations
+of all parts of the organism. III. The &ldquo;unerring power&rdquo; which
+sifts these variations is &ldquo;<i>natural selection</i> ... which selects
+exclusively for the good of each organic being.&rdquo; The rate of
+increase is such that only a few in each generation can live:
+hence the never sufficiently appreciated struggle for life. &ldquo;What
+a trifling difference must often determine which shall survive
+and which perish!&rdquo; The remaining heads explain the complex
+nature of the struggle, the reasons for deficient direct evidence,
+the advantage of divergence, &amp;c. In the joint essay the phrases
+&ldquo;natural selection&rdquo; and &ldquo;sexual selection&rdquo; were first made
+public by Darwin, the &ldquo;struggle for existence&rdquo; by Wallace.
+Darwin and Wallace had met only once before the departure of
+the latter for the East. Their rivalry in the discovery of the
+great principle of natural selection was the beginning of a lifelong
+friendship. Wallace was lying ill with intermittent fever at
+Ternate in February 1858 when he began to think of Malthus&rsquo;s
+<i>Essay on Population</i>, read several years before: suddenly the
+idea of the survival of the fittest flashed upon him. In two
+hours he had &ldquo;thought out almost the whole of the theory,&rdquo;
+and in three evenings had finished his essay. Darwin, also
+inspired after reading Malthus, in October 1838, did not publish
+until nearly twenty years had elapsed, and then only when
+Wallace sent him his essay. Canon H. B. Tristram was the first
+to apply the new theory, explaining by its aid the colours of
+desert birds, &amp;c. (<i>Ibis</i>, October 1859).</p>
+
+<p>Acting under the advice of Lyell and Hooker, Darwin then
+began to prepare what was to become the great work of his life.
+It appeared on the 24th of November 1859, with the full title,
+<i>On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the
+Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life</i>. The
+whole edition of 1250 copies was exhausted on the day of issue.
+The first four chapters explain the operation of artificial selection
+by man and of natural selection in consequence of the struggle for
+existence. The fifth chapter deals with the laws of variation and
+causes of modification other than natural selection. The five
+succeeding chapters consider difficulties in the way of a belief
+in evolution generally as well as in natural selection. The three
+remaining chapters (omitting the recapitulation which occupies
+the last) deal with the evidence for evolution. The theory which
+suggested a cause of evolution is thus given the foremost place,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page842" id="page842"></a>842</span>
+and the evidence for the existence of evolution considered last of
+all. This method of presentation was no doubt adopted because
+it was just the want of a reasonable motive-cause which more
+than anything else prevented the acceptance of evolution. But
+the other side of the book must not be eclipsed by the brilliant
+theory of Darwin and Wallace. The evidence for evolution itself
+had never before been thought out and marshalled in a manner
+which bears any comparison with that of Darwin in the <i>Origin</i>,
+and the work would have been in the highest degree epoch-making
+had it consisted of the later chapters alone. In the fifth
+chapter Darwin incorporated a certain proportion of the
+doctrines of Buffon,&mdash;modifications due to the direct influence
+of environment; and of Lamarck,&mdash;the hereditary effects of use
+and disuse. Lyell for a long time hesitated to accept the new
+teaching, and Darwin carried on a long correspondence with him.
+His public confession of faith was made at the anniversary
+dinner of the Royal Society in 1864. A storm of controversy
+arose over the book, reaching its height at the meeting of the
+British Association at Oxford in 1860, when the celebrated duel
+between T. H. Huxley and Bishop Wilberforce of Oxford took
+place. Throughout these struggles Huxley was the foremost
+champion for evolution and for fair play to natural selection,
+although he never entirely accepted the latter theory, holding
+that until man by his selection had made his domestic breed
+sterile <i>inter se</i>, there was no sufficient evidence that selection
+accounts for natural species which are thus separated by the
+barrier of sterility. The theory of natural selection was at first
+greatly misunderstood. Thus some writers thought it implied
+conscious choice in the animals themselves, others that it was
+the personification of some active power. By many it was
+thought to be practically the same idea as Lamarck&rsquo;s. Herbert
+Spencer&rsquo;s alternative phrase, &ldquo;the survival of the fittest,&rdquo; probably
+helped to spread a clear appreciation of Darwin&rsquo;s meaning.</p>
+
+<p>The history of opinion since 1859 may be summed up as follows.
+Evolution soon gained general acceptance, except among a certain
+number of those of middle or more advanced age at the time
+when the <i>Origin</i> appeared. Although natural selection had been
+an essential force in producing this conviction, there gradually
+grew up a tendency to minimize its importance in relation to the
+causes originally suggested by Buffon and Lamarck, which were
+ably presented and further elaborated by Herbert Spencer. In
+America a school of Neo-Lamarckians appeared, and for a time
+flourished under the inspiration of the vigorous personality of
+E. D. Cope. The writings of August Weismann next raised a
+controversy over the scope of heredity, assailing the very
+foundation of the hypotheses of Buffon, Lamarck and Herbert
+Spencer by demanding evidence that the &ldquo;acquired characters&rdquo;
+upon which they rest are capable of hereditary transmission.
+The quantitative determination of heredity has been the
+subject of much patient investigation under the leadership of
+Francis Galton. The question of isolation as a factor in species-formation
+has been greatly discussed, G. J. Romanes proposing,
+in his hypothesis of &ldquo;Physiological Selection,&rdquo; that the barrier
+of sterility may arise spontaneously by variation between two
+sets of individuals as the beginning instead of the climax of
+specific distinction. Others have fixed their attention upon the
+variations, which provided the material for natural selection, and
+have advocated the view that evolution proceeds by immense
+strides instead of the minute steps in which Darwin and Wallace
+believed. Others, again, have found significance in the artificial
+production of &ldquo;monstrosities&rdquo; or huge modifications during
+individual development. All through the period a varying
+proportion of naturalists, probably larger now than at any other
+time, has followed the founders of the theory, and has sought the
+motive-cause of evolution in &ldquo;the accumulative power of natural
+selection,&rdquo; which Darwin, as his first public statement indicates,
+looked upon &ldquo;as by far the most important element in the production
+of new forms.&rdquo; They hold, with Darwin and Wallace,
+that although variation provides the essential material, natural
+selection, from its accumulative power, is of such paramount
+importance that it may be said to create new species as truly as a
+man may be said to make a building out of the material provided
+by stones of various shapes, a metaphor suggested and elaborated
+by Darwin, and forming the concluding sentences of <i>The Variation
+of Animals and Plants under Domestication</i>. This, probably the
+second in importance of all his works, was published in 1868, and
+may be looked upon as a complete account of the material of
+which he had given a very condensed abstract in the first chapter
+of the <i>Origin</i>, together with the conclusions suggested by it.
+He finally brought together an immense number of apparently
+disconnected sets of observations under his &ldquo;provisional hypothesis
+of pangenesis,&rdquo; which assumes that every cell in the body,
+at every stage of growth and in maturity, is represented in each
+germ-cell by a gemmule. The germ-cell is only the meeting-place
+of gemmules, and the true reproductive power lies in the whole
+of the body-cells which despatch their representatives, hence
+&ldquo;pangenesis.&rdquo; There are reasons for believing that this infinitely
+complex conception, in which, as his letters show, he had great
+confidence, was forced upon Darwin in order to explain the
+hereditary transmission of acquired characters involved in the
+small proportion of Lamarckian doctrine which he incorporated.
+If such transmission does not occur, a far simpler hypothesis based
+on the lines of Weismann&rsquo;s &ldquo;continuity of the germ-plasm&rdquo; is
+sufficient to account for the facts.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex</i>, was
+published in 1871; as the title implies, it really consists of two
+distinct works. The first, and by far the shorter, was the full
+justification of his statement in the Origin that &ldquo;light would be
+thrown on the origin of man and his history.&rdquo; In the second
+part he brought together a large mass of evidence in support of
+his hypothesis of sexual selection which he had briefly described
+in the 1858 essay. This hypothesis explains the development of
+colours and structures peculiar to one sex and displayed by it in
+courtship, by the preferences of the other sex. The majority of
+naturalists probably agree with Darwin in believing that the
+explanation is real, but relatively unimportant. It is interesting
+to note that only in this subject and those treated of in the <i>Variation
+under Domestication</i> had Darwin exhausted the whole of the
+material which he had collected. The <i>Expression of the Emotions</i>,
+published in 1872, offered a natural explanation of phenomena
+which appeared to be a difficulty in the way of the acceptance of
+evolution. In 1876 Darwin brought out his two previously
+published geological works on <i>Volcanic Islands</i> and <i>South
+America</i> as a single volume. The widely read <i>Formation of
+Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms</i> appeared in 1881.
+He also published various volumes on botanical subjects. The
+<i>Fertilization of Orchids</i> appeared in 1862. The subject of cross-fertilization
+of flowers was in Darwin&rsquo;s mind, as shown by his
+note-book in 1837. In 1841 Robert Brown directed his attention
+to Christian Conrad Sprengel&rsquo;s work (Berlin, 1793), which confirmed
+his determination to pursue this line of research. <i>The
+Effects of Cross- and Self-Fertilization in the Vegetable Kingdom</i>
+(1876) contained the direct evidence that the offspring of cross-fertilized
+individuals are more vigorous, as well as more numerous,
+than those produced by a self-fertilized parent. <i>Different Forms
+of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species</i> appeared in 1877. It is
+here shown that each different form, although possessing both
+kinds of sexual organs, is specially adapted to be fertilized by the
+pollen of another form, and that when artificially fertilized by its
+own pollen less vigorous offspring, bearing some resemblance to
+hybrids, are produced. He says, &ldquo;no little discovery of mine
+ever gave me so much pleasure as the making out the meaning
+of heterostyled flowers&rdquo; (<i>Autobiography</i>). <i>Climbing Plants</i> was
+published in 1875, although it had, in large part, been communicated
+to the Linnean Society, in whose publications much of the
+material of several of his other works appeared. This inquiry
+into the nature of the movements of twining plants was suggested
+to him in a paper by Asa Gray. <i>The Power of Movement in
+Plants</i> (1880) was produced by him in conjunction with his son
+Francis. It was an inquiry into the minute power of movement
+possessed, he believed, by plants generally, out of which the
+larger movements of climbing plants of many different groups
+had been evolved. The work included an investigation of other
+kinds of plant movement due to light, gravity, &amp;c., all of which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page843" id="page843"></a>843</span>
+he regarded as modifications of the one fundamental movement
+(circumnutation) which exists in a highly specialized form in
+climbing plants. <i>Insectivorous Plants</i> (1875) is principally concerned
+with the description of experiments on the Sun-dew
+(<i>Drosera</i>), although other insect-catching plants, such as <i>Dionaea</i>,
+are also investigated.</p>
+
+<p>Charles Darwin&rsquo;s long life of patient, continuous work, the
+most fruitful, the most inspiring, in the annals of modern science,
+came to an end on the 19th of April 1882. He was buried in
+Westminster Abbey on the 26th. It is of much interest to attempt
+to set forth some of the main characteristics of the man who did
+so much for modern science, and in so large a measure moulded
+the form of modern thought. Although his ill-health prevented
+Darwin, except on rare occasions, from attending scientific and
+social meetings, and thus from meeting and knowing the great
+body of scientific and intellectual workers of his time, probably
+no man has ever inspired a wider and deeper personal interest and
+affection. This was in part due to the intimate personal friends
+who represented him in the circles he was unable frequently to
+enter, but chiefly to the kindly, generous, and courteous nature
+which was revealed in his large correspondence and published
+writings, and especially in his treatment of opponents.</p>
+
+<p>In a deeply interesting chapter of the <i>Life and Letters</i> Francis
+Darwin has given us his reminiscences of his father&rsquo;s everyday
+life. Rising early, he took a short walk before breakfasting alone
+at 7.45, and then at once set to work, &ldquo;considering the 1½ hours
+between 8.0 and 9.30 one of his best working times.&rdquo; He then
+read his letters and listened to reading aloud, returning to work
+at about 10.30. At 12 or 12.15 &ldquo;he considered his day&rsquo;s work
+over,&rdquo; and went for a walk, whether wet or fine. For a time he
+rode, but after accidents had occurred twice, was advised to give
+it up. After lunch he read the newspaper and wrote his letters
+or the MS. of his books. At about 3.0 he rested and smoked for
+an hour while being read to, often going to sleep. He then went
+for a short walk, and returning about 4.30, worked for an hour.
+After this he rested and smoked, and listened to reading until tea
+at 7.30, a meal which he came to prefer to late dinner. He then
+played two games of backgammon, read to himself, and listened
+to music and to reading aloud. He went to bed, generally very
+much tired, at 10.30, and was often much troubled by wakefulness
+and the activity of his thoughts. It is thus apparent that the
+number of hours devoted to work in each day was comparatively
+few. The immense amount he achieved was due to concentration
+during these hours, also to the unfailing and, because of his health,
+the necessary regularity of his life.</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of Charles Darwin has been made well known
+in numerous portraits and statues. He was tall and thin, being
+about six feet high, but looked less because of a stoop, which
+increased towards the end of his life. As a young man he had
+been active, with considerable powers of endurance, and possessed
+in a marked degree those qualities of eye and hand which make
+the successful sportsman.</p>
+
+<p>Charles Darwin was, as a young man, a believer in Christianity,
+and was sent to Cambridge with the idea that he would take
+orders. It is probable, however, that he had merely yielded to
+the influences of his home, without thinking much on the subject
+of religion. He first began to reflect deeply on the subject during
+the two years and a quarter which intervened between his return
+from the &ldquo;Beagle&rdquo; (October 2nd, 1836) and his marriage (January
+29th, 1839). His own words are, &ldquo;disbelief crept over me at a
+very slow rate, but was at last complete. The rate was so slow
+that I felt no distress.&rdquo; His attitude was that of the tolerant
+unaggressive agnostic, sympathizing with and helping in the
+social and charitable influences of the English Church in his
+parish. He was evidently most unwilling that his opinions on
+religious matters should influence others, holding, as his son,
+Francis Darwin, says, &ldquo;that a man ought not to publish on a
+subject to which he has not given special and continuous
+thought&rdquo; (<i>l.c.</i> i. p. 305).</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the personal qualities and powers of Charles
+Darwin, there were other contributing causes without which the
+world could never have reaped the benefit of his genius. It is
+evident that Darwin&rsquo;s health could barely have endured the strain
+of working for a living, and that nothing would have been left
+over for his researches. A deep debt of gratitude is owing to his
+father for placing him in a position in which all his energy could
+be devoted to scientific work and thought. But his ill-health was
+such that this important and essential condition would have
+been insufficient without another even more essential. Francis
+Darwin, in the <i>Life and Letters</i> (i. pp. 159-160), writes these
+eloquent and pathetic words:&mdash;&ldquo;No one indeed, except my
+mother, knows the full amount of suffering he endured, or the full
+amount of his wonderful patience. For all the latter years of his
+life she never left him for a night; and her days were so planned
+that all his resting hours might be shared with her. She shielded
+him from every avoidable annoyance, and omitted nothing that
+might save him trouble, or prevent him becoming over-tired,
+or that might alleviate the many discomforts of his ill-health. I
+hesitate to speak thus freely of a thing so sacred as the lifelong
+devotion which prompted all this constant and tender care. But
+it is, I repeat, a principal feature of his life, that for nearly forty
+years he never knew one day of the health of ordinary men, and
+that thus his life was one long struggle against the weariness and
+the strain of sickness. And this cannot be told without speaking
+of the one condition which enabled him to bear the strain and
+fight out the struggle to the end.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Charles Darwin was honoured by the chief societies of the
+civilized world. He was made a knight of the Prussian order,
+&ldquo;Pour le Mérite,&rdquo; in 1867, a corresponding member of the Berlin
+Academy of Sciences in 1863, a fellow in 1878, and later in the
+same year a corresponding member of the French Institute in the
+botanical section. He received the Bressa prize of the Royal
+Academy of Turin, and the Baly medal of the Royal College of
+Physicians in 1879, the Wollaston medal of the Geological Society
+in 1859, a Royal medal of the Royal Society in 1853, and the
+Copley medal in 1864. His health prevented him from accepting
+the honorary degree which Oxford University wished to confer
+on him, but his own university had stronger claims, and he
+received its honorary LL.D. in 1877.</p>
+
+<p>Two daughters and five sons survived him, four of the latter
+becoming prominent in the scientific world,&mdash;Sir George Howard
+(b. 1845), who became professor of astronomy and experimental
+philosophy at Cambridge in 1883; Francis (b. 1848), the distinguished
+botanist; Leonard (b. 1850), a major in the royal
+engineers, and afterwards well known as an economist; and
+Horace (b. 1851), civil engineer.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, including an autobiographical
+chapter</i>, edited by his son Francis Darwin (3 vols.,
+London, 1887); <i>Charles Darwin and the Theory of Natural Selection</i>,
+by E. B. Poulton (London, 1896); <i>Life and Letters of Thomas Henry
+Huxley</i>, by Leonard Huxley (2 vols., London, 1900); A. R. Wallace,
+<i>Darwinism</i> (1889); G. J. Romanes, <i>Darwin and after Darwin</i> (1895).
+Also the article on <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">T. H. Huxley</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(E. B. P.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DARWIN, ERASMUS<a name="ar168" id="ar168"></a></span> (1731-1802), English man of science
+and poet, was born at Elton, in Nottinghamshire, on the 12th of
+December 1731. After studying at St John&rsquo;s College, Cambridge,
+and at Edinburgh, he settled in 1756 as a physician at Nottingham,
+but meeting with little success he moved in the following
+year to Lichfield. There he gained a large practice, and did
+much, both by example and by more direct effort, to diminish
+drunkenness among the lower classes. In 1781 he removed to
+Derby, where he died suddenly on the 18th of April 1802. The
+fame of Erasmus Darwin as a poet rests upon his <i>Botanic Garden</i>,
+though he also wrote <i>The Temple of Nature, or the Origin of
+Society, a Poem, with Philosophical Notes</i> (1803), and <i>The Shrine
+of Nature</i> (posthumously published). The <i>Botanic Garden</i> (the
+second part of which&mdash;<i>The Loves of the Plants</i>&mdash;was published
+anonymously in 1789, and the whole of which appeared in 1791)
+is a long poem in the decasyllabic rhymed couplet. Its merit lies
+in the genuine scientific enthusiasm and interest in nature which
+pervade it; and of any other poetic quality&mdash;except a certain,
+sometimes felicitous but oftener ill-placed, elaborated pomp of
+words&mdash;it may without injustice be said to be almost destitute.
+It was for the most part written laboriously, and polished with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page844" id="page844"></a>844</span>
+unsparing care, line by line, often as he rode from one patient to
+another, and it occupied the leisure hours of many years. The
+artificial character of the diction renders it in emotional passages
+stilted and even absurd, and makes Canning&rsquo;s clever caricature&mdash;<i>The
+Loves of the Triangles</i>&mdash;often remarkably like the poem it
+satirizes: in some passages, however, it is not without a stately
+appropriateness. Gnomes, sylphs and nereids are introduced on
+almost every page, and personification is carried to an extraordinary
+excess. Thus he describes the <i>Loves of the Plants</i>
+according to the Linnaean system by means of a most ingenious
+but misplaced and amusing personification of each plant, and
+often even of the parts of the plant. It is significant that botanical
+notes are added to the poem, and that its eulogies of scientific
+men are frequent. Erasmus Darwin&rsquo;s mind was in fact rather
+that of a man of science than that of a poet. His most important
+scientific work is his <i>Zoonomia</i> (1794-1796), which contains a
+system of pathology, and a treatise on generation, in which he,
+in the words of his famous grandson, Charles Robert Darwin,
+&ldquo;anticipated the views and erroneous grounds of opinions of
+Lamarck.&rdquo; The essence of his views is contained in the following
+passage, which he follows up with the conclusion &ldquo;that one and
+the same kind of living filaments is and has been the cause of all
+organic life&rdquo;:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>&ldquo;Would it be too bold to imagine that, in the great length of time
+since the earth began to exist, perhaps millions of ages before the
+commencement of the history of mankind,&mdash;would it be too bold to
+imagine that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living
+filament, which the great First Cause endued with animality, with
+the power of acquiring new parts, attended with new propensities,
+directed by irritations, sensations, volitions and associations, and
+thus possessing the faculty of continuing to improve by its own
+inherent activity, and of delivering down these improvements by
+generation to its posterity, world without end!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In 1799 Darwin published his <i>Phytologia, or the Philosophy of
+Agriculture and Gardening</i> (1799), in which he states his opinion
+that plants have sensation and volition. A paper on <i>Female Education
+in Boarding Schools</i> (1797) completes the list of his works.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Waring Darwin (1766-1848), his third son by his first
+marriage, a doctor at Shrewsbury, was the father of the famous
+Charles Darwin; and Violetta, his eldest daughter by his second
+marriage, was the mother of Francis Galton.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Anna Seward, <i>Memoirs of the Life of Dr Darwin</i> (1804); and
+Charles Darwin, <i>Life of Erasmus Darwin, an introduction to an essay
+on his works by Ernst Krause</i> (1879).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DASENT, SIR GEORGE WEBBE<a name="ar169" id="ar169"></a></span> (1817-1896), English writer,
+was born in St Vincent, West Indies, on the 22nd of May 1817,
+the son of the attorney-general of that island. He was educated
+at Westminster school, King&rsquo;s College, and Oxford, where he
+was a contemporary of J. T. Delane (q.v.), whose friend he had
+become at King&rsquo;s College. On leaving the university in 1840 he
+was appointed to a diplomatic post in Stockholm. Here he met
+Jacob Grimm, and at his suggestion first interested himself in
+Scandinavian literature and mythology. In 1842 he published
+the results of his studies, a version of <i>The Prose or Younger
+Edda</i>, and in the following year he issued a <i>Grammar of the
+Icelandic or Old-Norse Tongue</i>, taken from the Swedish. Returning
+to England in 1845, he became assistant editor of <i>The Times</i>
+under Delane, whose sister he married; but he still continued his
+Scandinavian studies, publishing translations of various Norse
+stories. In 1853 he was appointed professor of English literature
+and modern history at King&rsquo;s College, London. In 1861-1862 he
+visited Iceland, and subsequently published <i>Gisli the Outlaw</i> and
+other translations from the Icelandic. In 1870 he was appointed
+a civil service commissioner and consequently resigned his post
+on <i>The Times</i>. In 1876 he was knighted. He retired from the
+public service in 1892, and died at Ascot on the 11th of June 1896.
+In addition to the works mentioned above, he published <i>The
+Story of Burnt Njal</i>, from the Icelandic of the <i>Njals Saga</i> (1861).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See the <i>Life of Delane</i> (1908), by Arthur Irwin Dasent.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DASHKOV, CATHERINA ROMANOVNA VORONTSOV,<a name="ar170" id="ar170"></a></span>
+<span class="sc">Princess</span> (1744-1810), Russian <i>littérateur</i>, was the third daughter
+of Count Roman Vorontsov, a member of the Russian senate,
+distinguished for his intellectual gifts. (For the family see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Vorontsov</a></span>.) She received an exceptionally good education,
+having displayed from a very early age the masculine ability
+and masculine tastes which made her whole career so singular.
+She was well versed in mathematics, which she studied at the
+university of Moscow, and in general literature her favourite
+authors were Bayle, Montesquieu, Boileau, Voltaire and
+Helvetius. While still a girl she was connected with the Russian
+court, and became one of the leaders of the party that attached
+itself to the grand duchess (afterwards empress) Catherine.
+Before she was sixteen she married Prince Mikhail Dashkov, a
+prominent Russian nobleman, and went to reside with him at
+Moscow. In 1762 she was at St Petersburg and took a leading part,
+according to her own account <i>the</i> leading part, in the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>
+by which Catherine was raised to the throne. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Catherine
+II.</a></span>) Another course of events would probably have resulted in
+the elevation of the Princess Dashkov&rsquo;s elder sister, Elizabeth,
+who was the emperor&rsquo;s mistress, and in whose favour he made no
+secret of his intention to depose Catherine. Her relations with the
+new empress were not of a cordial nature, though she continued
+devotedly loyal. Her blunt manners, her unconcealed scorn of
+the male favourites that disgraced the court, and perhaps also her
+sense of unrequited merit, produced an estrangement between
+her and the empress, which ended in her asking permission to
+travel abroad. The cause of the final breach was said to have
+been the refusal of her request to be appointed colonel of the
+imperial guards. Her husband having meanwhile died, she
+set out in 1768 on an extended tour through Europe. She
+was received with great consideration at foreign courts, and her
+literary and scientific reputation procured her the <i>entrée</i> to the
+society of the learned in most of the capitals of Europe. In
+Paris she secured the warm friendship and admiration of Diderot
+and Voltaire. She showed in various ways a strong liking for
+England and the English. She corresponded with Garrick, Dr
+Blair and Principal Robertson; and when in Edinburgh, where
+she was very well received, she arranged to entrust the education
+of her son to Principal Robertson. In 1782 she returned to the
+Russian capital, and was at once taken into favour by the empress,
+who strongly sympathized with her in her literary tastes, and
+specially in her desire to elevate Russ to a place among the
+literary languages of Europe. Immediately after her return the
+princess was appointed &ldquo;directeur&rdquo; of the St Petersburg
+Academy of Arts and Sciences; and in 1784 she was named the
+first president of the Russian Academy, which had been founded
+at her suggestion. In both positions she acquitted herself with
+marked ability. She projected the Russian dictionary of the
+Academy, arranged its plan, and executed a part of the work
+herself. She edited a monthly magazine; and wrote at least
+two dramatic works, <i>The Marriage of Fabian</i>, and a comedy
+entitled <i>Toissiokoff</i>. Shortly before Catherine&rsquo;s death the friends
+quarrelled over a tragedy which the princess had allowed to find
+a place in the publications of the Academy, though it contained
+revolutionary principles, according to the empress. A partial
+reconciliation was effected, but the princess soon afterwards
+retired from court. On the accession of the emperor Paul in 1796
+she was deprived of all her offices, and ordered to retire to a
+miserable village in the government of Novgorod, &ldquo;to meditate
+on the events of 1762.&rdquo; After a time the sentence was partially
+recalled on the petition of her friends, and she was permitted to
+pass the closing years of her life on her own estate near Moscow,
+where she died on the 4th of January 1810.</p>
+
+<p>Her son, the last of the Dashkov family, died in 1807 and bequeathed
+his fortune to his cousin Illarion Vorontsov, who thereupon
+by imperial licence assumed the name Vorontsov-Dashkov;
+and Illarion&rsquo;s son, Illarion Ivanovich Vorontsov-Dashkov (b. 1837),
+held an appointment in the tsar&rsquo;s household from 1881 to 1897.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The <i>Memoirs of the Princess Dashkoff written by herself</i> were published
+in 1840 in London in two volumes. They were edited by Mrs
+W. Bradford, who, as Miss Wilmot, had resided with the princess
+between 1803 and 1808, and had suggested their preparation.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DASS, PETTER<a name="ar171" id="ar171"></a></span> (1647-1708), the &ldquo;father&rdquo; of modern
+Norwegian poetry, was the son of Peter Dundas, a Scottish
+merchant of Dundee, who, leaving his country about 1630 to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page845" id="page845"></a>845</span>
+escape the troubles of the Presbyterian <span class="correction" title="amended from chursh">church</span>, settled in Bergen,
+and in 1646 married a Norse girl of good family. Petter Dass
+was born in 1647 on the island of Nord Herö; on the north coast
+of Norway. Seven years later his father died, and his mother
+placed him with his aunt, the wife of the priest of another little
+island-parish. In 1660 he was sent to school at Bergen, in 1665 to
+the university of Copenhagen, and in 1667 he began to earn his
+daily bread as a private tutor. In 1672 he was ordained priest,
+and remained till 1681 as under-chaplain at Nesne, a little parish
+near his birthplace; for eight years more he was resident
+chaplain at Nesne; and at last in 1689 he received the living of
+Alstahoug, the most important in the north of Norway. The
+rule of Alstahoug extended over all the neighbouring districts,
+including Dass&rsquo;s native island of Herö, and its privileges were
+accompanied by great perils, for it was necessary to be constantly
+crossing stormy firths of sea. Dass lived here in quietude, with
+something of the honours and responsibilities of a bishop,
+brought up his family in a God-fearing way, and wrote endless
+reams of verses. In 1700 he asked leave to resign his living
+in favour of his son Anders Dass, but this was not permitted;
+in 1704, however, Anders became his father&rsquo;s chaplain. About
+this time Petter went to Bergen, where he visited Dorothea
+Engelbrechtsdatter, with whom he had been for many years in
+correspondence. He continued to write till 1707, and died in
+August 1708. The materials for his biography are very numerous;
+he was regarded with universal curiosity and admiration in
+his lifetime; and, besides, he left a garrulous autobiography in
+verse. A portrait, painted in middle age, now in the church of
+Melhus, near Trondhjem, represents him in canonicals, with
+deep red beard and hair, the latter waved and silky, and a head of
+massive proportions. The face is full of fire and vigour. His
+writings passed in MS. from hand to hand, and few of them were
+printed in his lifetime. <i>Nordlands Trompet</i> (The Trumpet of
+Nordland), his greatest and most famous poem, was not published
+till 1739; <i>Den norska Dale-Vise</i> (The Norwegian Song of the
+Valley) appeared in 1696; the <i>Aandelig Tidsfordriv</i> (Spiritual
+Pastime), a volume of sacred poetry, was published in 1711. <i>The
+Trumpet of Nordland</i> remains as fresh as ever in the memories
+of the inhabitants of the north of Norway; boatmen, peasants,
+priests will alike repeat long extracts from it at the slightest
+notice, and its popularity is unbounded. It is a rhyming
+description of the province of Nordland, its natural features, its
+trades, its advantages and its drawbacks, given in dancing verse
+of the most breathless kind, and full of humour, fancy, wit and
+quaint learning. The other poems of Petter Dass are less universally
+read; they abound, however, in queer turns of thought,
+and fine homely fancies.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The collected writings of Dass were edited (3 vols., Christiania,
+1873-1877) by Dr A. E. Eriksen.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DASYURE,<a name="ar172" id="ar172"></a></span> a bookname for any member of the zoological
+family <i>Dasyuridae</i>. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Marsupialia</a></span>.) The name is better
+restricted to animals of the typical genus <i>Dasyurus</i>, sometimes
+called true Dasyures. These are mostly inhabitants of the
+Australian continent and Tasmania, where in the economy of
+nature they take the place of the smaller predaceous Carnivora,
+the cats, civets and weasels of other parts of the world. They
+hide themselves in the daytime in holes among rocks or in hollow
+trees, but prowl about at night in search of the small living
+mammals and birds which constitute their prey, and are to some
+extent arboreal in habit. The spot-tailed dasyure (<i>D. maculatus</i>),
+about the size of a cat, inhabiting Tasmania and Southern
+Australia, has transversely striated pads on the soles of the feet.
+These organs are also present in the North Australian dasyure
+(<i>D. hallucatus</i>) and the Papuan <i>D. albopunctatus</i>, and are
+regarded by Oldfield Thomas as indication of arboreal habits;
+in the common dasyure (<i>D. viverrinus</i>) from Tasmania and
+Victoria, and the black-tailed dasyure (<i>D. geoffroyi</i>) from South
+Australia, these feet-pads are absent, whence these species are
+believed to seek their prey on the ground. The ursine dasyure
+(<i>Sarcophilus ursinus</i>), often called the &ldquo;Tasmanian Devil,&rdquo;
+constitutes a distinct genus. In size it may be compared to an
+English badger; the general colour of the fur is black tinged
+with brown, with white patches on the neck, shoulders, rump and
+chest. It is a burrowing animal, of nocturnal habits, intensely
+carnivorous, and commits great depredations on the sheepyards
+and poultry-lofts of the settlers. In writing of this species Krefft
+says that one&mdash;by no means a large one&mdash;escaped from confinement
+and killed in two nights fifty-four fowls, six geese, an
+albatross and a cat. It was recaptured in what was considered a
+stout trap, with a door constructed of iron bars as thick as a lead
+pencil, but escaped by twisting this solid obstacle aside.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DATE PALM.<a name="ar173" id="ar173"></a></span> The dates<a name="fa1j" id="fa1j" href="#ft1j"><span class="sp">1</span></a> of commerce are the fruit of a species
+of palm, <i>Phoenix dactylifera</i>, a tree which ranges from the Canary
+Islands through Northern Africa and the south-east of Asia to
+India. It has been cultivated and much prized throughout most
+of these regions from the remotest antiquity. Its cultivation and
+use are described on the mural tablets of the ancient Assyrians.
+In Arabia it is the chief source of national wealth, and its fruit
+forms the staple article of food in that country. The tree has also
+been introduced along the Mediterranean shores of Europe; but
+as its fruit does not ripen so far north, the European plants are
+only used to supply leaves for the festival of Palm Sunday among
+Christians, and for the celebration of the Passover by Jews. It
+was introduced into the new world by early Spanish missionaries,
+and is now cultivated in the dry districts of the south-western
+United States and in Mexico. The date palm is a beautiful tree,
+growing to a height of from 60 to 80 ft., and its stem, which is
+strongly marked with old leaf-scars, terminates in a crown of
+graceful shining pinnate leaves. The flowers spring in branching
+spadices from the axils of the leaves, and as the trees are unisexual
+it is necessary in cultivation to fertilize the female flowers by
+artificial means. The fruit is oblong, fleshy and contains one
+very hard seed which is deeply furrowed on the inside. The fruit
+varies much in size, colour and quality under cultivation.
+Regarding this fruit, W. G. Palgrave (<i>Central and Eastern
+Arabia</i>) remarked: &ldquo;Those who, like most Europeans at home,
+only know the date from the dried specimens of that fruit shown
+beneath a label in shop-windows, can hardly imagine how delicious
+it is when eaten fresh and in Central Arabia. Nor is it, when
+newly gathered, heating,&mdash;a defect inherent to the preserved
+fruit everywhere; nor does its richness, however great, bring
+satiety; in short it is an article of food alike pleasant and healthy.&rdquo;
+In the oases of Sahara, and in other parts of Northern Africa,
+dates are pounded and pressed into a cake for food. The dried
+fruit used for dessert in European countries contains more than
+half its weight of sugar, about 6% of albumen, and 12% of
+gummy matter. All parts of the date palm yield valuable
+economic products. Its trunk furnishes timber for house-building
+and furniture; the leaves supply thatch; their footstalks are
+used as fuel, and also yield a fibre from which cordage is spun.</p>
+
+<p><i>Date sugar</i> is a valuable commercial product of the East Indies,
+obtained from the sap or toddy of <i>Phoenix sylvestris</i>, the toddy
+palm, a tree so closely allied to the date palm that it has been
+supposed to be the parent stock of all the cultivated varieties.
+The juice, when not boiled down to form sugar, is either drunk
+fresh, or fermented and distilled to form arrack. The uses of the
+other parts and products of this tree are the same as those of the
+date palm products. <i>Date palm meal</i> is obtained from the stem of
+a small species, <i>Phoenix farinifera</i>, growing in the hill country of
+southern India.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>For further details see Sir G. Watt, <i>Dictionary of the Economic
+Products of India</i> (1892); and <i>The Date Palm</i>, U.S. Department
+of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, Bulletin No. 53
+(W. T. Swingle), 1904.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1j" id="ft1j" href="#fa1j"><span class="fn">1</span></a> Lat. <i>dactylus</i>, finger, hence fruit of the date palm, gave O. Fr.
+<i>date</i>, mod. <i>datte</i>; distinguish &ldquo;date,&rdquo; in chronology, from Lat.
+<i>datum</i>, <i>data</i>, given, used at the beginning of a letter, &amp;c., to show
+time and place of writing, e.g. <i>Datum Romae</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DATIA,<a name="ar174" id="ar174"></a></span> a native state of Central India, in the Bundelkhand
+agency. It lies in the extreme north-west of Bundelkhand, near
+Gwalior, and is surrounded on all sides by other states of Central
+India, except on the east where it meets the United Provinces.
+The state came under the British government after the treaty
+of Bassein in 1802. Area, 911 sq. m. Pop. (1901) 173,759.
+Estimated revenue, £70,000; tribute to Sindhia paid through the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page846" id="page846"></a>846</span>
+British Government, £1000. The chief, whose title is maharaja,
+is a Rajput of the Bundela clan, being descended from a younger
+son of a former chief of Orchha. The state suffered from famine
+in 1896-1897, and again to a less extent in 1899-1900. It is
+traversed by the branch of the Indian Midland railway from
+Jhansi to Gwalior. The town of Datia has a railway station,
+16 m. from Jhansi. Pop. (1901) 24,071. It is surrounded by
+a stone wall, enclosing handsome palaces, with gardens; the
+palace of Bir Singh Deo, of the 17th century, is &ldquo;one of the finest
+examples of Hindu domestic architecture in India&rdquo; (<i>Imperial
+Gazetteer of India</i>, 1908).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DATIVE<a name="ar175" id="ar175"></a></span> (Lat. <i>dativus</i>, giving or given, from <i>dare</i>, to give),
+the name, in grammar, of the case of the &ldquo;indirect object,&rdquo; the
+person or thing to or for whom or which anything is given or done.
+In law, the word signifies something, such as an office, which
+may be disposed of at will or pleasure, and is opposed to perpetual.
+In Scots law the term is applied to persons, duties or powers,
+appointed or granted by a court of law; thus an &ldquo;executor-dative&rdquo;
+is an executor appointed by the court and not by a
+testator. It answers, therefore, to the English administrator (q.v.).
+In Roman law, a <i>tutor</i> was either <i>dativus</i>, if expressly nominated
+in a testament, or <i>optivus</i>, if a power of selection was given.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DATOLITE,<a name="ar176" id="ar176"></a></span> a mineral species consisting of basic calcium and
+boron orthosilicate, Ca(BOH)SiO<span class="su">4</span>. It was first observed by
+J. Esmark in 1806, and named by him from <span class="grk" title="dateisthai">&#948;&#945;&#964;&#949;&#8150;&#963;&#952;&#945;&#953;</span>, &ldquo;to
+divide,&rdquo; and <span class="grk" title="lithos">&#955;&#943;&#952;&#959;&#962;</span>, &ldquo;stone,&rdquo; in allusion to the granular structure
+of the massive mineral. It usually occurs as well-developed
+glassy crystals bounded by numerous bright faces, many of which
+often have a more or less pentagonal outline. The crystals were
+for a long time considered to be orthorhombic, and indeed they
+approach closely to this system in habit, interfacial angles and
+optical orientation; humboldtite was the name given by A. Lévy
+in 1823 to monoclinic crystals supposed to be distinct from
+datolite, but the two were afterwards proved to be identical.
+The mineral also occurs as masses with a granular to compact
+texture; when compact the fractured surfaces have the appearance
+of porcelain. A fibrous variety with a botryoidal or globular
+surface is known as botryolite. Datolite is white or colourless,
+often with a greenish tinge; it is transparent or opaque. Hardness
+5-5½; specific gravity 3.0.</p>
+
+<p>Datolite is a mineral of secondary origin, and in its mode of
+occurrence it resembles the zeolites, being found with them in the
+amygdaloidal cavities of basic igneous rocks such as basalt; it is
+also found in gneiss and serpentine, and in metalliferous veins
+and in beds of iron ore. At Arendal in Norway, the original
+locality for both the crystallized and botryoidal varieties, it is
+found in a bed of magnetite. In amygdaloidal basaltic rocks it is
+found at Bishopton in Renfrewshire and near Edinburgh; and
+as excellent crystallized specimens at several localities in the
+United States, e.g. at Westfield in Massachusetts, Bergen and
+Paterson in New Jersey, and in the copper-mining region of
+Lake Superior. At St Andreasberg in the Harz it occurs both
+in diabase and in the veins of silver ore. Fine specimens have
+recently been obtained from Tasmania.</p>
+
+<p>Large crystals of datolite completely altered to chalcedony
+were formerly found with magnetite in the Haytor iron mine on
+Dartmoor in Devonshire; to these pseudomorphs the name
+haytorite has been applied.</p>
+<div class="author">(L. J. S.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUB, KARL<a name="ar177" id="ar177"></a></span> (1765-1836), German Protestant theologian,
+was born at Cassel on the 20th of March 1765. He studied
+philosophy, philology and theology at Marburg in 1786, and
+eventually (1795) became professor ordinarius of theology at
+Heidelberg, where he died on the 22nd of November 1836. Daub
+was one of the leaders of a school which sought to reconcile
+theology and philosophy, and to bring about a speculative
+reconstruction of orthodox dogma. In the course of his intellectual
+development, he came successively under the influence
+of Kant, Schelling and Hegel, and on account of the different
+phases through which he passed he was called the Talleyrand of
+German thought. There was one great defect in his speculative
+theology: he ignored historical criticism. His purpose was, as
+Otto Pfleiderer says, &ldquo;to connect the metaphysical ideas, which
+had been arrived at by means of philosophical dialectic, directly
+with the persons and events of the Gospel narratives, thus raising
+these above the region of ordinary experience into that of
+the supernatural, and regarding the most absurd assertions
+as philosophically justified. Daub had become so hopelessly
+addicted to this perverse principle that he deduced not only Jesus
+as the embodiment of the philosophical idea of the union of God
+and man, but also Judas Iscariot as the embodiment of the idea
+of a rival god, or Satan.&rdquo; The three stages in Daub&rsquo;s development
+are clearly marked in his writings. His <i>Lehrbuch der
+Katechetik</i> (1801) was written under the spell of Kant. His
+<i>Theologumena</i> (1806), his <i>Einleitung in das Studium der christl.
+Dogmatik</i> (1810), and his <i>Judas Ischarioth</i> (2 vols., 1816, 2nd
+ed., 1818), were all written in the spirit of Schelling, the last
+of them reflecting a change in Schelling himself from theosophy
+to positive philosophy. Daub&rsquo;s <i>Die dogmatische Theologie jetziger
+Zeit oder die Selbstsucht in der Wissenschaft des Glaubens</i> (1833),
+and <i>Vorlesungen über die Prolegomena zur Dogmatik</i> (1839), are
+Hegelian in principle and obscure in language.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Rosenkranz, <i>Erinnerungen an Karl Daub</i> (1837); D. Fr.
+Strauss, <i>Charakteristiken und Kritiken</i> (2nd ed., 1844); and cf. F.
+Lichtenberger, <i>History of German Theology</i> (1889); Otto Pfleiderer,
+<i>Development of Theology</i> (1890).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(M. A. C.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUBENTON, LOUIS-JEAN-MARIE<a name="ar178" id="ar178"></a></span> (1716-1800), French
+naturalist, was born at Montbar (Côte d&rsquo;Or) on the 29th of May
+1716. His father, Jean Daubenton, a notary, destined him for
+the church, and sent him to Paris to learn theology, but the study
+of medicine was more to his taste. The death of his father in
+1736 set him free to follow his own inclinations, and accordingly
+in 1741 he graduated in medicine at Reims, and returned to his
+native town with the intention of practising as a physician.
+But about this time Buffon, also a native of Montbar, had formed
+the plan of bringing out a grand treatise on natural history, and
+in 1742 he invited Daubenton to assist him by providing the
+anatomical descriptions for that work. The characters of the
+two men were opposed in almost every respect. Buffon was
+violent and impatient; Daubenton, gentle and patient; Buffon
+was rash in his judgments, and imaginative, seeking rather to
+divine than to discover truths; Daubenton was cautious, and
+believed nothing he had not himself been able to see or ascertain.
+From nature each appeared to have received the qualities requisite
+to temper those of the other; and a more suitable coadjutor than
+Daubenton it would have been difficult for Buffon to obtain. In
+the first section of the natural history Daubenton gave descriptions
+and details of the dissection of 182 species of quadrupeds,
+thus procuring for himself a high reputation, and exciting the
+envy of Réaumur, who considered himself as at the head of
+the learned in natural history in France. A feeling of jealousy
+induced Buffon to dispense with the services of Daubenton in the
+preparation of the subsequent parts of his work, which, as a
+consequence, lost much in precision and scientific value. Buffon
+afterwards perceived and acknowledged his error, and renewed
+his intimacy with his former associate. The number of dissertations
+on natural history which Daubenton published in the
+memoirs of the French Academy is very great. Zoological
+descriptions and dissections, the comparative anatomy of recent
+and fossil animals, vegetable physiology, mineralogy, experiments
+in agriculture, and the introduction of the merino sheep into
+France gave active occupation to his energies; and the cabinet
+of natural history in Paris, of which in 1744 he was appointed
+keeper and demonstrator, was arranged and considerably
+enriched by him. From 1775 Daubenton lectured on natural
+history in the college of medicine, and in 1783 on rural economy
+at the Alfort school. He was also professor of mineralogy at the
+Jardin du Roi. As a lecturer he was in high repute, and to the
+last retained his popularity. In December 1799 he was appointed
+a member of the senate, but at the first meeting which he attended
+he fell from his seat in an apoplectic fit, and after a short illness
+died at Paris on the 1st of January 1800.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUBENY, CHARLES GILES BRIDLE<a name="ar179" id="ar179"></a></span> (1795-1867), English
+chemist, botanist and geologist, was the third son of the Rev.
+James Daubeny, and was born at Stratton in Gloucestershire on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page847" id="page847"></a>847</span>
+the 11th of February 1795. In 1808 he went to Winchester, and
+in 1810 he was elected to a demyship at Magdalen College,
+Oxford, where the lectures of Dr Kidd first awakened in him a
+desire for the cultivation of natural science. In 1814 he graduated
+with second-class honours, and in the next year he obtained
+the prize for the Latin essay. From 1815 to 1818 he studied
+medicine in London and Edinburgh. He took his M.D. degree
+at Oxford, and was a fellow of the College of Physicians. In 1819,
+in the course of a tour through France, he made the volcanic
+district of Auvergne a special study, and his <i>Letters on the
+Volcanos of Auvergne</i> were published in <i>The Edinburgh Journal</i>,
+1820-21. He was elected F.R.S. in 1822. By subsequent
+journeys in Hungary, Transylvania, Italy, Sicily, France and
+Germany he extended his knowledge of volcanic phenomena;
+and in 1826 the results of his observations were given in a work
+entitled <i>A Description of Active and Extinct Volcanos</i> (2nd ed.,
+1848). In common with Gay Lussac and Davy, he held subterraneous
+thermic disturbances to be probably due to the contact
+of water with metals of the alkalis and alkaline earths. In
+November 1822 Daubeny succeeded Dr Kidd as professor of
+chemistry at Oxford, and retained this post until 1855; and in
+1834 he was appointed to the chair of botany, to which was
+subsequently attached that of rural economy. At the Oxford
+botanic garden he conducted numerous experiments upon the
+effect of changes in soil, light and the composition of the atmosphere
+upon vegetation. In 1830 he published in the <i>Philosophical
+Transactions</i> a paper on the iodine and bromine of mineral waters.
+In the following year appeared his <i>Introduction to the Atomic
+Theory</i>, which was succeeded by a supplement in 1840, and in
+1850 by a second edition. In 1831 Daubeny represented the
+universities of England at the first meeting of the British Association,
+which at his request held their next session at Oxford.
+In 1836 he communicated to the Association a report on the
+subject of mineral and thermal waters. In 1837 he visited
+the United States, and acquired there the materials for papers
+on the thermal springs and the geology of North America, read
+in 1838 before the Ashmolean Society and the British Association.
+In 1856 he became president of the latter body at its
+meeting at Cheltenham. In 1841 Daubeny published his <i>Lectures
+on Agriculture</i>; in 1857 his <i>Lectures on Roman Husbandry</i>; in
+1863 <i>Climate: an inquiry into the causes of its differences and
+into its influence on Vegetable Life</i>; and in 1865 an <i>Essay on the
+Trees and Shrubs of the Ancients</i>, and a <i>Catalogue of the Trees
+and Shrubs indigenous to Greece and Italy</i>. His last literary work
+was the collection of his <i>Miscellanies</i>, published in two volumes,
+in 1867. In all his undertakings Daubeny was actuated by a
+practical spirit and a desire for the advancement of knowledge;
+and his personal influence on his contemporaries was in keeping
+with the high character of his various literary productions. He
+died in Oxford on the 12th of December 1867.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Obituary by John Phillips in <i>Proceedings of Ashmolean Soc.</i>,
+1868.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUBIGNY, CHARLES FRANÇOIS<a name="ar180" id="ar180"></a></span> (1817-1878), French landscape
+painter, allied in several ways with the Barbizon School,
+was born in Paris, on the 15th of February 1817, but spent much
+time as a child at Valmondois, a village on the Oise to the north-west
+of Paris. Daubigny was the son of an artist, and most of his
+family were painters. He began to paint very early in life, and at
+the age of seventeen he took a studio of his own. Within twelve
+months he had saved enough to go to Italy, where he studied and
+painted for nearly two years; he then returned to Paris, not to
+leave it again until, in 1860, he took a house at Auvers on the
+Oise. By 1837 Daubigny had become famous as a river and landscape
+painter, although he had been devoting himself as well to
+drawing in black-and-white, to etching, wood engraving, and
+lithography. In 1855 his picture, &ldquo;Lock at Optevoz,&rdquo; now in
+the Louvre, was purchased by the state; four years later
+Daubigny was created knight of the Legion of Honour, and in
+1874 he was promoted to be an officer. In 1866, at the invitation
+of Lord, then Mr Leighton and others, he visited London, where,
+however, he was hurt by his now famous &ldquo;Moonlight&rdquo; being
+badly hung in the Old Royal Academy. But the personal
+encouragement of his admirers in England made up for the disappointment,
+and the sale of his picture to a Royal Academician
+greatly pleased him. In 1870-1871 he again visited London, and
+subsequently Holland, where he painted a number of river scenes
+with windmills. In 1874, having returned to Paris, he fell ill,
+and from that time until he died (on the 19th of February 1878)
+his work won less distinction than before. In 1904 the municipality
+of Auvers-sur-Oise decided to erect a bronze monument
+to Daubigny&rsquo;s memory.</p>
+
+<p>Daubigny&rsquo;s finest pictures were painted between 1864 and
+1874, and these for the most part consist of carefully completed
+landscapes with trees, river and a few ducks. It has curiously
+been said, yet with some appearance of truth, that when
+Daubigny liked his pictures himself he added another duck or
+two, so that the number of ducks often indicates greater or less
+artistic quality in his pictures. One of his sayings was, &ldquo;The
+best pictures do not sell,&rdquo; as he frequently found his finest
+achievements little understood. Yet although during the latter
+part of his life he was considered a highly successful painter, the
+money value of his pictures since his death has increased nearly
+tenfold. Daubigny is chiefly preferred in his riverside pictures,
+of which he painted a great number, but although there are two
+large landscapes by Daubigny in the Louvre, neither is a river
+view. They are for that reason not so typical as many of his
+smaller Oise and Seine pictures.</p>
+
+<p>The works of Daubigny are, like Corot&rsquo;s, to be found in many
+modern collections. His most ambitious canvases are: &ldquo;Springtime&rdquo;
+(1857), in the Louvre; &ldquo;Borde de la Cure, Morvan&rdquo; (1864);
+&ldquo;Villerville sur Mer&rdquo; (1864); &ldquo;Moonlight&rdquo; (1865); &ldquo;Andrésy sur
+Oise&rdquo; (1868); and &ldquo;Return of the Flock&mdash;Moonlight&rdquo; (1878).</p>
+
+<p>His followers and pupils were his son Karl (who sometimes
+painted so well that his works are occasionally mistaken for those
+of his father, though in few cases do they equal his father&rsquo;s
+mastery), Oudinot, Delpy and Damoye.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Fred Henriet, <i>C. Daubigny et son &oelig;uvre</i> (Paris, 1878);
+D. Croal Thomson, <i>The Barbizon School of Painters</i> (London, 1890);
+J. W. Mollett, <i>Daubigny</i> (London, 1890); J. Claretie, <i>Peintres
+et sculpteurs contemporains: Daubigny</i> (Paris, 1882); Albert
+Wolff, <i>La Capitale de l&rsquo;art: Ch. François Daubigny</i> (Paris, 1881).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(D. C. T.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUBRÉE, GABRIEL AUGUSTE<a name="ar181" id="ar181"></a></span> (1814-1896), French
+geologist, was born at Metz, on the 25th of June 1814, and
+educated at the École Polytechnique in Paris. At the age of
+twenty he had qualified as a mining engineer, and in 1838 he was
+appointed to take charge of the mines in the Bas-Rhin (Alsace),
+and subsequently to be professor of mineralogy and geology at
+the Faculty of Sciences, Strassburg. In 1859 he became engineer
+in chief of mines, and in 1861 he was appointed professor of
+geology at the museum of natural history in Paris and was also
+elected member of the Academy of Sciences. In the following
+year he became professor of mineralogy at the École des Mines,
+and in 1872 director of that school. In 1880 the Geological
+Society of London awarded to him the Wollaston medal. His
+published researches date from 1841, when the origin of certain
+tin minerals attracted his attention; he subsequently discussed
+the formation of bog-iron ore, and worked out in detail the
+geology of the Bas-Rhin (1852). From 1857 to 1861, while
+engaged in engineering works connected with the springs of
+Plombières, he made a series of interesting observations on
+thermal waters and their influence on the Roman masonry through
+which they made their exit. He was, however, especially distinguished
+for his long-continued and often dangerous experiments
+on the artificial production of minerals and rocks. He likewise
+discussed the permeability of rocks by water, and the effects of
+such infiltration in producing volcanic phenomena; he dealt with
+the subject of metamorphism, with the deformations of the earth&rsquo;s
+crust, with earthquakes, and with the composition and classification
+of meteorites. He died in Paris on the 29th of May 1896.</p>
+
+<p>His publications were: <i>Études et expériences synthétiques sur
+le métamorphisme et sur la formation des roches cristallines</i>
+(1860); <i>Études synthétiques de géologie expérimentale</i> (1879);
+<i>Les Eaux souterraines à l&rsquo;époque actuelle</i> (2 vols., 1887); <i>Le
+Eaux souterraines aux époques anciennes</i> (1887).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page848" id="page848"></a>848</span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUDET, ALPHONSE<a name="ar182" id="ar182"></a></span> (1840-1897), French novelist, was born
+at Nîmes on the 13th of May 1840. His family, on both sides,
+belonged to the <i>bourgeoisie</i>. The father, Vincent Daudet, was a
+silk manufacturer&mdash;a man dogged through life by misfortune and
+failure. The lad, amid much truancy, had but a depressing boyhood.
+In 1856 he left Lyons, where his schooldays had been
+mainly spent, and began life as an usher at Alais, in the south.
+The position proved to be intolerable. As Dickens declared that
+all through his prosperous career he was haunted in dreams by
+the miseries of his apprenticeship to the blacking business, so
+Daudet says that for months after leaving Alais he would wake
+with horror thinking he was still among his unruly pupils. On
+the 1st of November 1857 he abandoned teaching, and took
+refuge with his brother Ernest, only some three years his senior,
+who was trying, &ldquo;and thereto soberly,&rdquo; to make a living as a
+journalist in Paris. Alphonse betook himself to his pen likewise,&mdash;wrote
+poems, shortly collected into a small volume <i>Les Amoureuses</i>
+(1858), which met with a fair reception,&mdash;obtained employment
+on the <i>Figaro</i>, then under Cartier de Villemessant&rsquo;s
+energetic editorship, wrote two or three plays, and began to be
+recognized, among those interested in literature, as possessing
+individuality and promise. Morny, the emperor&rsquo;s all-powerful
+minister, appointed him to be one of his secretaries,&mdash;a post
+which he held till Morny&rsquo;s death in 1865,&mdash;and showed him no
+small kindness. He had put his foot on the road to fortune.</p>
+
+<p>In 1866 appeared <i>Lettres de mon moulin</i>, which won the attention
+of many readers. The first of his longer books, <i>Le petit chose</i>
+(1868), did not, however, produce any very popular sensation.
+It is, in its main feature, the story of his own earlier years told
+with much grace and pathos. The year 1872 produced the
+famous <i>Aventures prodigieuses de Tartarin de Tarascon</i>, and the
+three-act piece <i>L&rsquo;Arlésienne</i>. But <i>Fromont jeune et Risler aîné</i>
+(1874) at once took the world by storm. It struck a note, not
+new certainly in English literature, but comparatively new in
+French. Here was a writer who possessed the gift of laughter and
+tears, a writer not only sensible to pathos and sorrow, but also to
+moral beauty. He could create too. His characters were real
+and also typical; the <i>ratés</i>, the men who in life&rsquo;s battle had
+flashed in the pan, were touched with a master hand. The book
+was alive. It gave the illusion of a real world. <i>Jack</i>, the story
+of an illegitimate child, a martyr to his mother&rsquo;s selfishness, which
+followed in 1876, served only to deepen the same impression.
+Henceforward his career was that of a very successful man of
+letters,&mdash;publishing novel on novel, <i>Le Nabab</i> (1877), <i>Les Rois en
+exil</i> (1879), <i>Numa Roumestan</i> (1881), <i>Sapho</i> (1884), <i>L&rsquo;Immortel</i>
+(1888),&mdash;and writing for the stage at frequent intervals,&mdash;giving
+to the world his reminiscences in <i>Trente ans de Paris</i> (1887),
+and <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;un homme de lettres</i> (1888). These, with the
+three <i>Tartarins</i>,&mdash;Tartarin the mighty hunter, Tartarin the
+mountaineer, Tartarin the colonist,&mdash;and the admirable short
+stories, written for the most part before he had acquired fame
+and fortune, constitute his life work.</p>
+
+<p>Though Daudet defended himself from the charge of imitating
+Dickens, it is difficult altogether to believe that so many similarities
+of spirit and manner were quite unsought. What, however,
+was purely his own was his style. It is a style that may rightly
+be called &ldquo;<i>impressionist</i>,&rdquo; full of light and colour, not descriptive
+after the old fashion, but flashing its intended effect by a masterly
+juxtaposition of words that are like pigments. Nor does it
+convey, like the style of the Goncourts, for example, a constant
+feeling of effort. It is full of felicity and charm,&mdash;<i>un charmeur</i>
+Zola has called him. An intimate friend of Edmond de Goncourt
+(who died in his house), of Flaubert, of Zola, Daudet belonged
+essentially to the naturalist school of fiction. His own experiences,
+his surroundings, the men with whom he had been brought
+into contact, various persons who had played a part, more or less
+public, in Paris life&mdash;all passed into his art. But he vivified the
+material supplied by his memory. His world has the great gift
+of life. <i>L&rsquo;Immortel</i> is a bitter attack on the French Academy, to
+which august body Daudet never belonged.</p>
+
+<p>Daudet wrote some charming stories for children, among which
+may be mentioned <i>La Belle Nivernaise</i>, the story of an old boat
+and her crew. His married life&mdash;he married in 1867 Julia Allard&mdash;seems
+to have been singularly happy. There was perfect
+intellectual harmony, and Madame Daudet herself possessed
+much of his literary gift; she is known by her <i>Impressions de
+nature et d&rsquo;art</i> (1879), <i>L&rsquo;Enfance d&rsquo;une Parisienne</i> (1883), and
+by some literary studies written under the pseudonym of Karl
+Steen. In his later years Daudet suffered from insomnia, failure
+of health and consequent use of chloral. He died in Paris on the
+17th of December 1897.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The story of Daudet&rsquo;s earlier years is told in his brother Ernest
+Daudet&rsquo;s <i>Mon frère et moi</i>. There is a good deal of autobiographical
+detail in Daudet&rsquo;s <i>Trente ans de Paris</i> and <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;un homme de
+lettres</i>, and also scattered in his other books. The references to him
+in the <i>Journal des Goncourt</i> are numerous. See also L. A. Daudet,
+<i>Alphonse Daudet</i> (1898), and biographical and critical essays by
+R. H. Sherard (1894); by A. Gerstmann (1883); by B. Diederich
+(1900); by A. Hermant (1903), and a bibliography by J. Brivois
+(1895); also <i>The Works of Alphonse Daudet</i>, translated by L. Ensor,
+H. Frith, E. Bartow (1902, etc.). Criticism of Daudet is also to
+be found in F. Brunetière, <i>Le Roman naturaliste</i> (new ed., 1897);
+J. Lemaître, <i>Les Contemporains</i> (vols. ii. and iv.); G. Pellissier, <i>Le
+Mouvement littéraire au XIX<span class="sp">e</span> siècle</i> (1890); A. Symons, <i>Studies in
+Prose and Verse</i> (1904).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(F. T. M.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAULATABAD,<a name="ar183" id="ar183"></a></span> a hill-fortress in Hyderabad state, India,
+about 10 m. N.W. of the city of Aurangabad. The former city of
+Daulatabad (Deogiri) has shrunk into a mere village, though
+to its earlier greatness witness is still borne by its magnificent
+fortress, and by remains of public buildings noble even in their
+decay. The fortress stands on a conical rock crowning a hill that
+rises almost perpendicularly from the plain to a height of some
+600 ft. The outer wall, 2¾ m. in circumference, once enclosed the
+ancient city of Deogiri (Devagiri), and between this and the base
+of the upper fort are three lines of defences. The fort is a place of
+extraordinary strength. The only means of access to the summit
+is afforded by a narrow bridge, with passage for not more than
+two men abreast, and a long gallery, excavated in the rock, which
+has for the most part a very gradual upward slope, but about
+midway is intercepted by a steep stair, the top of which is covered
+by a grating destined in time of war to form the hearth of a huge
+fire kept burning by the garrison above. Besides the fortifications
+Daulatabad contains several notable monuments, of which
+the chief are the Chand Minar and the Chini Mahal. The Chand
+Minar, considered one of the most remarkable specimens of
+Mahommedan architecture in southern India, is a tower 210 ft.
+high and 70 ft. in circumference at the base, and was originally
+covered with beautiful Persian glazed tiles. It was erected in
+1445 by Ala-ud-din Bahmani to commemorate his capture of the
+fort. The Chini Mahal, or China Palace, is the ruin of a building
+once of great beauty. In it Abul Hasan, the last of the Kutb
+Shahi kings of Golconda, was imprisoned by Aurangzeb in 1687.</p>
+
+<p>Deogiri is said to have been founded <i>c.</i> A.D. 1187 by Bhillama I.
+the prince who renounced his allegiance to the Chalukyas and
+established the power of the Yadava dynasty in the west. In
+1294 the fort was captured by Ala-ud-din Khilji, and the rajas,
+so powerful that they were held by the Mussulmans at Delhi
+to be the rulers of all the Deccan, were reduced to pay tribute.
+The tribute falling into arrear, Deogiri was again occupied by the
+Mahommedans under Malik Kafur, in 1307 and 1310, and in 1318
+the last raja, Harpal, was flayed alive. Deogiri now became an
+important base for the operations of the Mussulman conquering
+expeditions southwards, and in 1339 Mahommed ben Tughlak
+Shah determined to make it his capital, changed its name to
+Daulatabad (&ldquo;Abode of Prosperity&rdquo;), and made arrangements
+for transferring to it the whole population of Delhi. The project
+was interrupted by troubles which summoned him to the north;
+during his absence the Mussulman governors of the Deccan
+revolted; and Daulatabad itself fell into the hands of Zafar
+Khan, the governor of Gulbarga. It remained in the hands of the
+Bahmanis till 1526, when it was taken by the Nizam Shahis.
+It was captured by the emperor Akbar, but in 1595 it again
+surrendered to Ahmad Nizam Shah of Ahmednagar, on the fall of
+whose dynasty in 1607 it passed into the hands of the usurper,
+the Nizam Shahi minister Malik Amber, originally an Abyssinian
+slave, who was the founder of Kharki (the present Aurangabad).
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page849" id="page849"></a>849</span>
+His successors held it until their overthrow by Shah Jahan, the
+Mogul emperor, in 1633; after which it remained in the possession
+of the Delhi emperors until, after the death of Aurangzeb,
+it fell to the first nizam of Hyderabad. Its glory, however, had
+already decayed owing to the removal of the seat of government
+by the emperors to Aurangabad.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUMIER, HONORÉ<a name="ar184" id="ar184"></a></span> (1808-1879), French caricaturist and
+painter, was born at Marseilles. He showed in his earliest youth
+an irresistible inclination towards the artistic profession, which
+his father vainly tried to check by placing him first with a
+<i>huissier</i>, and subsequently with a bookseller. Having mastered
+the technique of lithography, Daumier started his artistic career
+by producing plates for music publishers, and illustrations for
+advertisements; these were followed by anonymous work for
+publishers, in which he followed the style of Charlet and displayed
+considerable enthusiasm for the Napoleonic legend.
+When, in the reign of Louis Philippe, Philipon launched the
+comic journal, <i>La Caricature</i>, Daumier joined its staff, which
+included such powerful artists as Devéria, Raffet and Grandville,
+and started upon his pictorial campaign of scathing satire upon
+the foibles of the bourgeoisie, the corruption of the law and the
+incompetence of a blundering government. His caricature of the
+king as &ldquo;Gargantua&rdquo; led to Daumier&rsquo;s imprisonment for six
+months at Ste Pélagie in 1832. The publication of <i>La Caricature</i>
+was discontinued soon after, but Philipon provided a new field
+for Daumier&rsquo;s activity when he founded the <i>Charivari</i>. For this
+journal Daumier produced his famous social caricatures, in which
+bourgeois society is held up to ridicule in the figure of Robert
+Macaire, the hero of a then popular melodrama. Another
+series, &ldquo;<i>L&rsquo;histoire ancienne</i>,&rdquo; was directed against the pseudo-classicism
+which held the art of the period in fetters. In 1848
+Daumier embarked again on his political campaign, still in the
+service of <i>Charivari</i>, which he left in 1860 and rejoined in 1864.
+In spite of his prodigious activity in the field of caricature&mdash;the
+list of Daumier&rsquo;s lithographed plates compiled in 1904 numbers
+no fewer than 3958&mdash;he found time for flight in the higher sphere
+of painting. Except for the searching truthfulness of his vision
+and the powerful directness of his brushwork, it would be difficult
+to recognize the creator of <i>Robert Macaire</i>, of <i>Les Bas bleus</i>,
+<i>Les Bohémiens de Paris</i>, and the <i>Masques</i>, in the paintings of
+&ldquo;Christ and His Apostles&rdquo; at the Ryks Museum in Amsterdam,
+or in his &ldquo;Good Samaritan,&rdquo; &ldquo;Don Quixote and Sancho Panza,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Christ Mocked,&rdquo; or even in the sketches in the Ionides Collection
+at South Kensington. But as a painter, Daumier, one of the
+pioneers of naturalism, was before his time, and did not meet with
+success until in 1878, a year before his death, when M. Durand-Ruel
+collected his works for exhibition at his galleries and
+demonstrated the full range of the genius of the man who has been
+well called the Michelangelo of caricature. At the time of this
+exhibition Daumier, totally blind, was living in a cottage at
+Valmondois, which was placed at his disposal by Corot, and
+where he breathed his last in 1879. An important exhibition of
+his works was held at the École des Beaux-Arts in 1900.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>His life and art were made the subject of an important volume
+by Arséne Alexandre in 1888; see also Gustave Geffroy, <i>Daumier</i>
+(Paris, Libraire de l&rsquo;Art), and Henri Frantz and Octave Uzanne,
+<i>Daumier and Gavarni</i> (London, <i>The Studio</i>, 1904), with a large selection
+of the artist&rsquo;s work.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUN (DHAUN), LEOPOLD JOSEF,<a name="ar185" id="ar185"></a></span> <span class="sc">Count Von</span> (1705-1766),
+prince of Thiano, Austrian field marshal, was born at Vienna
+on the 24th of September 1705. He was intended for the
+church, but his natural inclination for the army, in which his
+father and grandfather had been distinguished generals, proved
+irresistible. In 1718 he served in the campaign in Sicily, in his
+father&rsquo;s regiment. He had already risen to the rank of colonel
+when he saw further active service in Italy and on the Rhine in
+the War of the Polish Succession (1734-35). He continued to add
+to his distinctions in the war against the Turks (1737-39), in
+which he attained the rank of a general officer. In the War of the
+Austrian Succession (1740-42), Daun, already a lieutenant field
+marshal in rank, distinguished himself by the careful leadership
+which was afterwards his greatest military quality. He was
+present at Chotusitz and Prague, and led the advanced guard
+of Khevenhüller&rsquo;s army in the victorious Danube campaign
+of 1743. Field Marshal Traun, who succeeded Khevenhüller in
+1744, thought equally highly of Daun, and entrusted him with
+the rearguard of the Austrian army when it escaped from the
+French to attack Frederick the Great. He held important
+commands in the battles of Hohenfriedberg and Soor, and in the
+same year (1745) was promoted to the rank of <i>Feldzeugmeister</i>.
+After this he served in the Low Countries, and was present
+at the battle of Val. He was highly valued by Maria Theresa,
+who made him commandant of Vienna and a knight of the
+Golden Fleece, and in 1754 he was elevated to the rank of field
+marshal.</p>
+
+<p>During the interval of peace that preceded the Seven Years&rsquo;
+War he was engaged in carrying out an elaborate scheme for the
+reorganization of the Austrian army; and it was chiefly through
+his instrumentality that the military academy was established
+at Wiener-Neustadt in 1751. He was not actively employed in
+the first campaigns of the war, but in 1757 he was placed at the
+head of the army which was raised to relieve Prague. On the
+18th of June 1757 Daun defeated Frederick for the first time in
+his career in the desperately fought battle of Kolin (q.v.). In
+commemoration of this brilliant exploit the queen immediately
+instituted a military order bearing her name, of which Daun was
+nominated first grand cross. The union of the relieving army
+with the forces of Prince Charles at Prague reduced Daun to the
+position of second in command, and as such he took part in the
+pursuit of the Prussians and the victory of Breslau. Frederick
+now reappeared and won the most brilliant victory of the age
+at Leuthen. Daun was present on that field, but was not held
+accountable for the disaster, and when Prince Charles resigned
+his command, Daun was appointed in his place. With the
+campaign of 1758 began the war of man&oelig;uvre in which Daun,
+if he missed, through over-caution, many opportunities of crushing
+the Prussians, at least maintained a steady and cool resistance
+to the fiery strategy of Frederick. In 1758 Major-General
+Loudon, acting under Daun&rsquo;s instructions, forced the king to
+raise the siege of Olmütz, and later in the same year Daun himself
+surprised Frederick at Hochkirch and inflicted a severe defeat
+upon him (October 14th). In the following year the war of
+man&oelig;uvre continued, and on the 20th and 21st of November he
+surrounded the entire corps of General Finck at Maxen, forcing
+the Prussians to surrender. These successes were counterbalanced
+in the following year by the defeat of Loudon at
+Liegnitz, which was attributed to the dilatoriness of Daun, and
+Daun&rsquo;s own defeat in the great battle of Torgau (q.v.). In this
+engagement Daun was so severely wounded that he had to return
+to Vienna to recruit.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to command until the end of the war, and afterwards
+worked with the greatest energy at the reorganization of
+the imperial forces. In 1762 he had been appointed president
+of the <i>Hofkriegsrath</i>. He died on the 5th of February 1766. By
+the order of Maria Theresa a monument to his memory was
+erected in the church of the Augustinians, with an inscription
+styling him the &ldquo;saviour of her states.&rdquo; In 1888 the 56th
+regiment of Austrian infantry was named after him. As a
+general Daun has been reproached for the dilatoriness of his
+operations, but wariness was not misplaced in opposing a general
+like Frederick, who was quick and unexpected in his movements
+beyond all precedent. Less defence perhaps may be made for
+him on the score of inability to profit by a victory.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>Der deutsche Fabius Cunctator, oder Leben u. Thaten S. E. des
+H. Leopold Reichsgrafen v. Dhaun K.K.F.M.</i> (Frankfort and
+Leipzig, 1759-1760), and works dealing with the wars of the period.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUNOU, PIERRE CLAUDE FRANÇOIS<a name="ar186" id="ar186"></a></span> (1761-1840), French
+statesman and historian, was born at Boulogne-sur-Mer, and after
+a brilliant career in the school of the Oratorians there, joined the
+order in Paris in 1777. He was professor in various seminaries
+from 1780 till 1787, when he was ordained priest. He was
+already known in literary circles by several essays and poems,
+when the revolution opened a wider career. He threw himself
+with ardour into the struggle for liberty, and refused to be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page850" id="page850"></a>850</span>
+silenced in his advocacy of the civil constitution of the clergy
+by the offer of high office in the church. Elected to the Convention
+by Pas-le-Calais, he associated himself with the Girondists,
+but strongly opposed the death sentence on the king. He took
+little part in the struggle against the Mountain, but was involved
+in the overthrow of his friends, and was imprisoned for a year.
+In December 1794 he returned to the Convention, and was the
+principal author of the constitution of the year III. It seems to
+have been due to his Girondist ideas that the Ancients were
+given the right of convoking the <i>corps législatif</i> outside Paris,
+an expedient which made possible Napoleon&rsquo;s <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i> of the
+18th and 19th Brumaire. The creation of the Institute was also
+due to Daunou, who drew up the plan for its organization. His
+energy was largely responsible for the suppression of the royalist
+insurrection of the 13th Vendémiaire, and the important place he
+occupied at the beginning of the Directory is indicated by the
+fact that he was elected by twenty-seven departments as member
+of the Council of Five Hundred, and became its first president.
+He had himself set the age qualification of the directors at forty,
+and thus debarred himself as candidate, as he was only thirty-four.
+The direction of affairs having passed into the hands
+of Talleyrand and his associates, Daunou turned once more to
+literature, but in 1798 he was sent to Rome to organize the
+republic there, and again, almost against his will, he lent his aid
+to Napoleon in the preparation of the constitution of the year
+VIII. His attitude towards Napoleon was not lacking in independence,
+but in this controversy with the pope, the emperor was
+able again to secure from him the learned treatise <i>Sur la puissance
+temporelle du Pape</i> (1809). Still he took little part in the new
+régime, with which at heart he had no sympathy, and turned
+more and more to literature. At the Restoration he was
+deprived of the post of archivist of the empire, which he had
+held from 1807, but from 1819 to 1830 (when he again became
+archivist of the kingdom) he held the chair of history and ethics
+at the Collège de France, and his courses were among the most
+famous of that age of public lectures. During the reign of Louis
+Philippe he received many honours. In 1839 he was made a peer.
+He died in 1840.</p>
+
+<p>In politics Daunou was a Girondist without combativeness;
+a confirmed republican, who lent himself always to the policy
+of conciliation, but whose probity remained unchallenged. He
+belonged essentially to the centre, and lacked both the genius
+and the temperament which would secure for him a commanding
+place in a revolutionary era. As an historian his breadth of view
+is remarkable for his time; for although thoroughly imbued with
+the classical spirit of the 18th century, he was able to do justice
+to the middle ages. His <i>Discours sur l&rsquo;état des lettres au XIII<span class="sp">e</span>
+siècle</i>, in the sixteenth volume of the <i>Histoire littéraire de France</i>,
+is a remarkable contribution to that vast collection, especially
+as coming from an author so profoundly learned in the ancient
+classics. Daunou&rsquo;s lectures at the Collège de France, collected
+and published after his death, fill twenty volumes (<i>Cours
+d&rsquo;études historiques</i>, 1842-1846). They treat principally of the
+criticism of sources and the proper method of writing history, and
+occupy an important place in the evolution of the scientific study
+of history in France. All his works were written in the most
+elegant style and chaste diction; but apart from his share in the
+editing of the <i>Historiens de la France</i>, they were mostly in the
+form of separate articles on literary and historical subjects.
+Personally Daunou was reserved and somewhat austere, preserving
+in his habits a strange mixture of bourgeois and monk. His
+indefatigable work as archivist in the time when Napoleon was
+transferring so many treasures to Paris is not his least claim to
+the gratitude of scholars.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Mignet, <i>Notice historique sur la vie et les travaux de Daunou</i>
+(Paris, 1843); Taillandier, <i>Documents bibliographiques sur Daunou</i>
+(Paris, 1847), including a full list of his works; Sainte-Beuve,
+<i>Daunou</i> in his <i>Portraits Contemporains</i>, t. iii. (unfavourable and
+somewhat unfair).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUPHIN<a name="ar187" id="ar187"></a></span> (Lat. <i>Delphinus</i>), an ancient feudal title in France,
+borne only by the counts and dauphins of Vienne, the dauphins
+of Auvergne, and from 1364 by the eldest sons of the kings of
+France. The origin of this curious title is obscure and has been
+the subject of much ingenious controversy; but it now seems clear
+that it was in the first instance a proper name. Among the Norsemen,
+and in the countries colonized by them, the name Dolphin
+or Dolfin (<i>dolfr</i>, &ldquo;a wound&rdquo;) was fairly common, e.g. in the
+north of England; thus a Dolfin is mentioned among the tenants-in-chief
+in Domesday Book, and there was a Dolphin, lord of
+Carlisle, towards the end of the 11th century. It has thus been
+conjectured by some that the dauphins of Vienne derived their
+title from Teutonic sources through Germany. But in the south,
+too, the name&mdash;not necessarily derived from the same root&mdash;was
+not unknown, though exceedingly rare, and was moreover
+illustrated by two conspicuous figures in the Catholic martyrology:
+St Delphinus, bishop of Bordeaux from 380 to 404, and
+St Annemundus, surnamed Dalfinus, bishop of Lyons from
+<i>c.</i> 650 to 657. Whatever its origin, this name was borne by
+Guigo, or Guigue IV. (d. 1142), count of Albon and Grenoble, as an
+additional name, during the lifetime of his father, and was also
+adopted by his son Guigue V. Beatrice, daughter and heiress
+of Guigue V., whose second husband was Hugh III., duke of
+Burgundy, bestowed the name on their son André, to recall his
+descent from the ancient house of the counts of Albon, and in the
+charters he is called sometimes Andreas Dalphinus, sometimes
+Dalphinus simply, but his style is still &ldquo;count of Albon and
+Vienne.&rdquo; His successors Guigue VI. (d. 1270) and John I.
+(d. 1282) call themselves sometimes Delphinus, sometimes
+Delphini, the name being obviously treated as a patronymic,
+and in the latter form it was borne by the sons of the reigning
+&ldquo;dauphin.&rdquo; But even under Guigue VI. foreigners had begun
+to confuse the name with a title of dignity, an imperial diploma
+of 1248 describing Guigue as &ldquo;Guigo Dalphinus Viennensis.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the third dynasty, founded by the marriage
+of Anne, heiress of John I., with Humbert, lord of La Tour du
+Pin, that &ldquo;dauphin&rdquo; became definitely established as a title.
+Humbert not only assumed the name of Delphinus, but styled
+himself regularly Dauphin of the Viennois (Dalphinus Viennensis),
+and in a treaty concluded in 1285 between Humbert and
+Robert, duke of Burgundy, the word <i>delphinatus</i> (Dauphiné)
+appears for the first time, as a synonym for <i>comitatus</i> (county).
+In 1349 Humbert II., the last of his race, sold Dauphiné to
+Charles of Valois, who, when he became king of France in 1364,
+transferred it to his eldest son. From that time the eldest sons of
+the kings of France were always either actual or titular dauphins
+of the Viennois. The &ldquo;canting arms&rdquo; of a dolphin, which they
+quartered with the royal <i>fleurs de lys</i>, were originally assumed by
+Dauphin, count of Clermont, instead of the arms of Auvergne
+(the earliest extant example is appended to a deed of 1199), and
+from him they were borrowed by the counts of the Viennois.
+Guigue VI. used this device on his secret seal from his accession,
+the earliest extant example dating from 1237, but, though no
+specimens have survived, M. Prudhomme thinks it probable that
+the dolphin was also borne by André Dauphin. It was also
+assumed by Guigue V., count of Forez (1203-1241), a descendant
+of Guigue Raymond of the Viennois, count of Forez, in right of his
+wife Ida Raymonde. It is thus abundantly clear that the name
+of Dauphin was not assumed from the armorial device, but vice
+versa.</p>
+
+<p>The eldest son of the French king was sometimes called
+&ldquo;the king dauphin&rdquo; (<i>le roy daulphin</i>), to distinguish him from
+the dauphin of Auvergne, who was known, since Auvergne became
+an appanage of the royal house, as &ldquo;the prince dauphin.&rdquo; The
+dauphinate of Auvergne, which is to be distinguished from the
+county, dates from 1155, when William VII., count of Auvergne,
+was deposed by his uncle William VIII. &ldquo;the Old.&rdquo; William VII.
+had married a daughter of Guigue IV. Dauphin, after whom their
+son was named Dauphin (Delphinus). The name continued, as in
+Viennois, as a patronymic, and was not used as a title until 1281,
+when Robert II., count of Clermont, in his will, styles himself for
+the first time Dauphin of Auvergne (<i>Alvernie delphinus</i>) for the
+portion of the county of Auvergne left to his house. In 1428
+Jeanne, heiress of the dauphin Béraud III., married Louis de
+Bourbon, count of Montpensier (d. 1486), thus bringing the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page851" id="page851"></a>851</span>
+dauphinate into the royal house of France. It was annexed to
+the crown in 1693.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See A. Prudhomme, &ldquo;De l&rsquo;origine et du sens des mots dauphin et
+dauphiné&rdquo; in <i>Bibliothèque de l&rsquo;École des Chartes</i>, liv. an. 1893 (Paris,
+1893).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAUPHINÉ,<a name="ar188" id="ar188"></a></span> one of the old provinces (the name being still
+in current use in the country) of pre-Revolutionary France, in
+the south-east portion of France, between Provence and Savoy;
+since 1790 it forms the departments of the Isère, the Drôme and
+the Hautes Alpes.</p>
+
+<p>After the death of the last king of Burgundy, Rudolf III., in
+1032, the territories known later as Dauphiné (as part of his
+realm) reverted to the far-distant emperor. Much confusion
+followed, out of which the counts of Albon (between Valence and
+Vienne) gradually came to the front. The first dynasty ended in
+1162 with Guigue V., whose daughter and heiress, Beatrice,
+carried the possessions of her house to her husband, Hugh III.,
+duke of Burgundy. Their son, André, continued the race, this
+second dynasty making many territorial acquisitions, among
+them (by marriage) the Embrunais and the Gapençais in 1232.
+In 1282 the second dynasty ended in another heiress, Anna, who
+carried all to her husband, Humbert, lord of La Tour du Pin
+(between Lyons and Grenoble). The title of the chief of the house
+was Count (later Dauphin) of the Viennois, <i>not</i> of Dauphiné.
+(For the origin of the terms Dauphin and Dauphiné see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Dauphin</a></span>.)
+Humbert II. (1333-1349), grandson of the heiress Anna, was the
+last independent Dauphin, selling his dominions in 1349 to
+Charles of Valois, who on his accession to the throne of France
+as Charles V. bestowed Dauphiné on his eldest son, and the title
+was borne by all succeeding eldest sons of the kings of France.
+In 1422 the Diois and the Valentinois, by the will of the last
+count, passed to the eldest son of Charles VI., and in 1424 were
+annexed to the Dauphiné. Louis (1440-1461), later Louis XI.
+of France, was the last Dauphin who occupied a semi-independent
+position, Dauphiné being annexed to the crown in 1456. The
+suzerainty of the emperor (who in 1378 had named the Dauphin
+&ldquo;Imperial Vicar&rdquo; within Dauphiné and Provence) gradually died
+out. In the 16th century the names of the reformer Guillaume
+Farel (1489-1565) and of the duke of Lesdiguières (1543-1626)
+are prominent in Dauphiné history. The &ldquo;States&rdquo; of Dauphiné
+(dating from about the middle of the 14th century) were suspended
+by Louis XIII. in 1628, but their unauthorized meeting
+(on the 21st of July 1788) in the tennis court (<i>Salle du Jeu de
+Paume</i>) of the castle of Vizille, near Grenoble, was one of
+the earliest premonitory signs of the great French Revolution
+of 1789. It was at Laffrey, near Grenoble, that Napoleon
+(March 7th, 1815) was first acclaimed by his old soldiers sent to
+arrest him.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;J. Brun-Durand, <i>Dictionnaire topographique du
+département de la Drôme</i> (Paris, 1891); Jules Chevalier, <i>Essai
+historique sur l&rsquo;église et la ville de Die</i>, Montélimar and Valence
+(2 vols., 1888 and 1896); W. A. B. Coolidge, H. Duhamel and Félix
+Perrin, <i>Climbers&rsquo; Guide to the Central Alps of the Dauphiny</i> (a revision
+of a French work by the same, issued at Grenoble in 1887), London,
+1892 (new ed. 1905); J. J. Guiffrey, <i>Histoire de la réunion du
+Dauphiné à la France</i> (Paris, 1868); Joanne, <i>Dauphiné</i> (Paris, 1905);
+A. Prudhomme, <i>Histoire de Grenoble</i> (Grenoble, 1888); <i>Ib.</i>, &ldquo;De
+l&rsquo;origine des mots &lsquo;Dauphin&rsquo; et Dauphiné&rdquo; (article in vol. liv. (1893)
+of the <i>Bibliothèque de l&rsquo;École des Chartes</i>); A. Rochas, <i>Biographie
+du Dauphiné</i> (2 vols., Paris, 1856); J. Roman, <i>Dictionnaire topographique</i>
+(Paris, 1884); <i>Tableau historique</i> (Paris, 2 vols., 1887 and
+1890); and <i>Répertoire archéologique du département des Hautes-Alpes</i>
+(Paris, 1888); J. Roman, <i>Histoire de la ville de Gap</i> (Gap, 1892);
+A. De Terrebasse, <i>Notice sur les Dauphins de Viennois</i> (Vienne,
+1875); J. M. De Valbonnais, <i>Histoire de Dauphiné</i> (2 vols., Geneva,
+1722); J. A. Félix Faure, <i>Les Assemblées de Vizille et de Romans</i>,
+1788 (Paris, 1887); O. Chenavas, <i>La Révolution de 1788 en Dauphiné</i>
+(Grenoble, 1888); C. Lory, <i>Description géologique du Dauphiné</i>
+(Paris, 1860).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. A. B. C.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAURAT<a name="ar189" id="ar189"></a></span> (or <span class="sc">Dorat</span>), <b>JEAN</b> (in Lat. <span class="sc">Auratus</span>), (1508-1588),
+French poet and scholar, and member of the Pléiade, was born
+at Limoges in 1508. His name was originally Dinemandy. He
+belonged to a noble family, and, after studying at the college of
+Limoges, came up to Paris to be presented to Francis I., who
+made him tutor to his pages. He rapidly gained an immense
+reputation as a classical scholar. As a private tutor in the house
+of Lazare de Baïf, he had J. A. de Baïf for his pupil. His son,
+Louis, showed great precocity, and at the age of ten translated
+into French verse one of his father&rsquo;s Latin pieces; his poems
+were published with his father&rsquo;s. Jean Daurat became the
+director of the Collège de Coqueret, where he had among his
+pupils, besides Baïf, Ronsard, Remy, Belleau and Pontus de
+Tyard. Joachim du Bellay was added by Ronsard to this group;
+and these five young poets, under the direction of Daurat, formed
+a society for the reformation of the French language and literature.
+They increased their number to seven by the initiation of the
+dramatist Étienne Jodelle, and thereupon they named themselves
+La Pléiade, in emulation of the seven Greek poets of Alexandria.
+The election of Daurat as their president proved the weight of his
+personal influence, and the value his pupils set on the learning to
+which he introduced them, but as a writer of French verse he is
+the least important of the seven. Meanwhile he collected around
+him a sort of Academy, and stimulated the students on all sides
+to a passionate study of Greek and Latin poetry. He himself
+wrote incessantly in both those languages, and was styled the
+Modern Pindar. His influence extended beyond the bounds of
+his own country, and he was famous as a scholar in England,
+Italy and Germany. In 1556 he was appointed professor of
+Greek at the Collège Royale, a post which he continued to hold
+until, in 1567, he resigned it in favour of his nephew, Nicolas
+Goulu. Charles IX. gave him the title of <i>poeta regius</i>. His flow
+of language was the wonder of his time; he is said to have composed
+more than 15,000 Greek and Latin verses. The best of
+these he published at Paris in 1586 as <i>J. Aurati Lemovicis poëtae
+et interpretis regii poëmata</i>. He died at Paris on the 1st of
+November 1588, having survived all his illustrious pupils of the
+Pléiade, except Pontus de Tyard. He was a little, restless
+man, of untiring energy, rustic in manner and appearance. His
+unequalled personal influence over the most graceful minds of
+his age gives him an importance in the history of literature for
+which his own somewhat vapid writings do not fully account.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The <i>&OElig;uvres poétiques</i> in the vernacular of Jean Daurat
+were edited (1875) with biographical notice and bibliography by
+Ch. Marty-Laveaux in his <i>Pléiade française</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVENANT, CHARLES<a name="ar190" id="ar190"></a></span> (1656-1714), English economist,
+eldest son of Sir William Davenant, the poet, was born in London,
+and educated at Cheam grammar school and Balliol College,
+Oxford, but left the university without taking a degree. At the
+age of nineteen he had composed a tragedy, <i>Circe</i>, which met with
+some success, but he soon turned his attention to law, and having
+taken the degree of LL.D., he became a member of Doctors&rsquo;
+Commons. He was member of parliament successively for St
+Ives, Cornwall, and for Great Bedwyn. He held the post of
+commissioner of excise from 1683 to 1689, and that of inspector-general
+of exports and imports from 1705 till his death in 1714.
+He was also secretary to the commission appointed to treat for
+the union with Scotland. As an economist, he must be classed
+as a strong supporter of the mercantile theory, and in his economic
+pamphlets&mdash;as distinct from his political writings&mdash;he takes up
+an eclectic position, recommending governmental restrictions on
+colonial commerce as strongly as he advocates freedom of exchange
+at home. Of his writings, a complete edition of which
+was published in London in 1771, the following are the more
+important:&mdash;<i>An Essay on the East India Trade</i> (1697); <i>Two
+Discourses on the Public Revenues and Trade of England</i> (1698);
+<i>An Essay on the probable means of making the people gainers in
+the balance of Trade</i> (1699); <i>A Discourse on Grants and Resumptions
+and Essays on the Balance of Power</i> (1701).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVENANT<a name="ar191" id="ar191"></a></span> (or <span class="sc">D&rsquo;Avenant</span>), <b>SIR WILLIAM</b> (1606-1668),
+English poet and dramatist, was baptized on the 3rd of March
+1606; he was born at the Crown Inn, Oxford, of which his
+father, a wealthy vintner, was proprietor. It was stated that
+Shakespeare always stopped at this house in passing through the
+city of Oxford, and out of his known or rumoured admiration of
+the hostess, a very fine woman, there sprang a scandalous story
+which attributed Davenant&rsquo;s paternity to Shakespeare, a legend
+which there is reason to believe Davenant himself encouraged,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page852" id="page852"></a>852</span>
+but which later criticism has cast aside as spurious. In 1621 the
+vintner was made mayor of Oxford, and in the same year his son
+left the grammar school of All Saints, where his master had been
+Edward Sylvester, and was entered an undergraduate of Lincoln
+College, Oxford. He did not stay at the university, however,
+long enough to take a degree, but was hurried away to appear at
+court as a page, in the retinue of the gorgeous duchess of Richmond.
+From her service he passed into that of Fulke Greville,
+Lord Brooke, in whose house he remained until the murder of
+that eminent man in 1628. This blow threw him upon the world,
+not altogether without private means, but greatly in need of a
+profitable employment.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to the stage for subsistence, and in 1629 produced
+his first play, the tragedy of <i>Albovine</i>. It was not a very brilliant
+performance, but it pleased the town, and decided the poet to
+pursue a dramatic career. The next year saw the production at
+Blackfriars of <i>The Cruel Brother</i>, a tragedy, and <i>The Just Italian</i>,
+a tragi-comedy. Inigo Jones, the court architect, for whom
+Ben Jonson had long supplied the words of masques and complimentary
+pieces, quarrelled with his great colleague in the year
+1634, and applied to William Davenant for verses. The result
+was <i>The Temple of Love</i>, performed by the queen and her ladies
+at Whitehall on Shrove Tuesday, 1634, and printed in that year.
+Another masque, <i>The Triumphs of the Prince D&rsquo;Amour</i>, followed
+in 1636. The poet returned to the legitimate drama by the
+publication of the tragi-comedy of <i>The Platonic Lovers</i>, and the
+famous comedy of <i>The Wits</i>, in 1636, the latter of which, however,
+had been licensed in 1633. The masque of <i>Britannica Triumphans</i>
+(1637) brought him into some trouble, for it was suppressed as a
+punishment for its first performance having been arranged for
+a Sunday. By this time Davenant had, however, thoroughly
+ingratiated himself with the court; and on the death of Ben
+Jonson in 1637 he was rewarded with the office of poet-laureate,
+to the exclusion of Thomas May, who considered himself entitled
+to the honour. It was shortly after this event that Davenant
+collected his minor lyrical pieces in a volume entitled <i>Madagascar
+and other Poems</i> (1638); and in 1639 he became manager
+of the new theatre in Drury Lane. The civil war, however, put a
+check upon this prosperous career; and he was among the most
+active partisans of royalty through the whole of that struggle for
+supremacy.</p>
+
+<p>As early as May 1642, Davenant was accused before the Long
+Parliament of being mainly concerned in a scheme to seduce the
+army to overthrow the Commons. He was accordingly apprehended
+at Faversham, and imprisoned for two months in London;
+he then attempted to escape to France, and succeeded in reaching
+Canterbury, where he was recaptured. Escaping a second time,
+he made good his way to the queen, with whom he remained in
+France until he volunteered to carry over to England some
+military stores for the army of his old friend the earl of Newcastle,
+by whom he was induced to enter the service as lieutenant-general
+of ordnance. He acquitted himself with so much
+bravery and skill that, after the siege of Gloucester, in 1643, he
+was knighted by the king. After the battle of Naseby he retired
+to Paris, where he became a Roman Catholic, and spent some
+months in the composition of his epic poem of <i>Gondibert</i>. In
+1646 he was sent by the queen on a mission to Charles I., then at
+Newcastle, to advise him to &ldquo;part with the church for his peace
+and security.&rdquo; The king dismissed him with some sharpness,
+and Davenant returned to Paris, where he was the guest of Lord
+Jermyn. In 1650 he took the command of a colonizing expedition
+that set sail from France to Virginia, but was captured in the
+Channel by a parliamentary man-of-war, which took him back
+to the Isle of Wight. Imprisoned in Cowes castle until 1651,
+he tempered the discomfort and suspense of his condition by
+continuing the composition of <i>Gondibert</i>. He was sent up to the
+Tower to await his trial for high treason, but just as the storm
+was about to break over his head, all cleared away. It is believed
+that the personal intercession of Milton led to this result. Another
+account is that he was released by the desire of two aldermen
+of York, once his prisoners, whom he had allowed to escape.
+Davenant, released from prison, immediately published <i>Gondibert</i>,
+the work on which his fame mainly rests, a chivalric epic in
+the four-line stanza which Sir John Davies had made popular
+by his <i>Nosce teipsum</i>, the influence of which is strongly
+marked in the philosophical passages of <i>Gondibert</i>. It is a
+cumbrous, dull production, but is relieved with a multitude
+of fine and felicitous passages, and lends itself most happily to
+quotation.</p>
+
+<p>During the civil war one of his plays had been printed, the
+tragedy of <i>The Unfortunate Lovers</i>, in 1643. One of his best
+plays, <i>Love and Honour</i>, was published in 1649, but appears to
+have been acted long before. He found that there were many
+who desired him to recommence his theatrical career. Such a
+step, however, was absolutely forbidden by Puritan law. Davenant,
+therefore, by the help of some influential friends, obtained
+permission to open a sort of theatre at Rutland House, in
+Charterhouse Yard, where, on the 21st of May 1656, he began a
+series of representations, which he called <i>operas</i>, as an inoffensive
+term. This word was then first introduced into the English
+language. The opening piece was a kind of dialogue defending
+the drama in the abstract. This was followed by his own <i>Siege of
+Rhodes</i>, printed the same year, which was performed with stage
+decorations and machinery of a kind hitherto quite unthought of
+in England. Two other innovations in its production were the
+introduction of recitative and the appearance of a woman, Mrs
+Coleman, on the stage. He continued until the Restoration to
+produce ephemeral works of this kind, only one of which, <i>The
+Cruelty of the Spaniards in Peru</i>, in 1658, was of sufficient literary
+merit to survive. In 1660 he had the infinite satisfaction of being
+able to preserve the life of that glorious poet who had, nine years
+before, saved his own from a not less imminent danger. The
+mutual relations of Milton and Davenant do honour to the
+generosity of two men who, sincerely opposed in politics, knew
+how to forget their personal anger in their common love of letters.
+In 1659 Davenant suffered a short imprisonment for complicity
+in Sir George Booth&rsquo;s revolt. Under Charles II. Davenant
+flourished in the dramatic world; he opened a new theatre in
+Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn Fields, which he called the Duke&rsquo;s; and he introduced
+a luxury and polish into the theatrical life which it had
+never before known in England. Under his management, the
+great actors of the Restoration, Betterton and his coevals, took
+their peculiar French style and appearance; and the ancient
+simplicity of the English stage was completely buried under the
+tinsel of decoration and splendid scenery. Davenant brought
+out six new plays in the Duke&rsquo;s Theatre, <i>The Rivals</i> (1668), an
+adaptation of <i>The Two Noble Kinsmen</i>, which Davenant never
+owned, <i>The Man&rsquo;s the Master</i> (1669), comedies translated from
+Scarron, <i>News from Plymouth</i>, <i>The Distresses</i>, <i>The Siege</i>, <i>The
+Fair Favourite</i>, tragi-comedies, all of which were printed after
+his death, and only one of which survived their author on the
+stage. He died at his house in Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn Fields on the night
+of the 7th of April 1668, and two days afterwards was buried in
+Poets&rsquo; Corner, Westminster Abbey, with the inscription &ldquo;O rare
+Sir William Davenant!&rdquo; In 1672 his writings were collected in
+folio. His last work had been to travesty Shakespeare&rsquo;s <i>Tempest</i>
+in company with Dryden.</p>
+
+<p>The personal character, adventures and fame of Davenant,
+and more especially his position as a leading reformer, or rather
+debaser, of the stage, have always given him a prominence in the
+history of literature which his writings hardly justify. His plays
+are utterly unreadable, and his poems are usually stilted and
+unnatural. With Cowley he marks the process of transition
+from the poetry of the imagination to the poetry of the intelligence;
+but he had far less genius than Cowley, and his
+influence on English drama must be condemned as wholly
+deplorable.</p>
+<div class="author">(E. G.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVENPORT, EDWARD LOOMIS<a name="ar192" id="ar192"></a></span> (1816-1877), American
+actor, born in Boston, made his first appearance on the stage in
+Providence in support of Junius Brutus Booth. Afterwards he
+went to England, where he supported Mrs Anna Cora Mowatt
+(Ritchie) (1819-1870), Macready and others. In 1854 he was
+again in the United States, appearing in Shakespearian plays
+and in dramatizations of Dickens&rsquo;s novels. As Bill Sykes he was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page853" id="page853"></a>853</span>
+especially successful, and his Sir Giles Overreach and Brutus
+were also greatly admired. He died at Canton, Pennsylvania,
+on the 1st of September 1877. In 1849 he had married Fanny
+Vining (Mrs Charles Gill) (d. 1891), an English actress also in
+Mrs Mowatt&rsquo;s company. Their daughter <span class="sc">Fanny</span> (<span class="sc">Lily Gipsy</span>)
+<span class="sc">Davenport</span> (1850-1898) appeared in America at the age of twelve
+as the king of Spain in <i>Faint Heart Never Won Fair Lady</i>.
+Later (1869) she was a member of Daly&rsquo;s company; and afterwards,
+with a company of her own, acted with especial success
+in Sardou&rsquo;s <i>Fédora</i> (1883), <i>Cleopatra</i> (1890), and similar plays.
+Her last appearance was on the 25th of March 1898, shortly
+before her death.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVENPORT, ROBERT<a name="ar193" id="ar193"></a></span> (fl. 1623-1639), English dramatist, is
+mentioned as the author of a play licensed in 1624 under the title
+of <i>Henry I.</i> In 1653 <i>Henry I. and Henry II.</i> was entered at
+Stationers&rsquo; Hall by Humphrey Moseley with a second part said
+to be the work of Davenport and Shakespeare. Of this play or
+plays nothing has been discovered, but <i>King John and Matilda</i>
+(printed 1655), which probably dates from about the same time,
+has survived. Throughout the play, as in its closing scene
+quoted by Charles Lamb in his <i>Dramatic Specimens</i>, there is much
+&ldquo;passion and poetry&rdquo; which saves the piece from being classed
+as pure melodrama. <i>The City-Night-Cap</i> was licensed in 1624,
+but not printed until 1661. The underplot of this unsavoury
+play was borrowed from Cervantes and Boccaccio, and Mrs
+Aphra Behn&rsquo;s <i>Amorous Prince</i> (1671) is an adaptation from it.
+<i>A New Tricke to Cheat the Divell</i> (printed 1639) is a farcical
+comedy, which contains among other things the idea of the
+popular supper story which reappears in Hans Andersen&rsquo;s
+<i>Little Claus and Big Claus</i>. As told by Davenport the story
+closely resembles the <i>Scottish Freires of Berwick</i>, which was
+printed in 1603. Three other plays entered in the Stationers&rsquo;
+Register as Davenport&rsquo;s are lost, and he collaborated in two
+plays with Thomas Drue.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Davenport&rsquo;s plays were reprinted by A. H. Bullen in <i>Old English
+Plays</i> (new series, 1890). The volume includes two didactic poems,
+which first saw the light in 1623.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVENPORT,<a name="ar194" id="ar194"></a></span> a city and the county seat of Scott county,
+Iowa, U.S.A., on the Mississippi river, opposite Rock Island,
+Illinois, with which it is connected by two fine bridges and by
+a ferry. It is the third largest city in the state. Pop. (1890)
+26,872; (1900) 35,254, including 8479 foreign-born (6111
+German), and 19,230 of foreign parentage (13,294 German);
+(1905, state census) 39,797; (1910) 43,028. Davenport is served
+by the Chicago, Burlington &amp; Quincy, the Chicago, Milwaukee &amp;
+St Paul, the Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific, the Iowa &amp; Illinois
+(interurban), and the Davenport, Rock Island &amp; North Western
+railways; opposite the city is the western terminus of the
+Illinois and Mississippi, or Hennepin, Canal (which connects the
+Mississippi and Illinois rivers). Davenport lies on the slope of a
+bluff affording extensive views of landscape and river scenery.
+In the city are an excellent public library, an Academy of Sciences,
+several turn-halls and other German social organizations, the
+Iowa soldiers&rsquo; orphans&rsquo; home, Brown business college, and several
+minor Roman Catholic institutions. Davenport is an episcopal
+see of the Roman Catholic and the Protestant Episcopal churches.
+The city has a large commerce and trade by water and rail in coal
+and grain, which are produced in the vicinity, is of special
+importance. With Rock Island and Moline it forms one great
+commercial unit. Among Davenport&rsquo;s manufactures are the
+products of foundries and machine shops, and of flouring, grist
+and planing mills; glucose syrup and products; locomotives,
+steel cars and car parts, washing machines, waggons, carriages,
+agricultural implements, buttons, macaroni, crackers and
+brooms. The value of the total factory product for 1905
+was $13,695,978, an increase of 38.7% over that of 1900.
+Davenport was founded in 1835, under the leadership of Colonel
+George Davenport; it was incorporated as a town in 1838,
+and was chartered as a city in 1851.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVENTRY,<a name="ar195" id="ar195"></a></span> a market town and municipal borough in the
+Southern parliamentary division of Northamptonshire, England,
+74 m. N.W. from London by the London &amp; North Western
+railway. Pop. (1901) 3780. It is picturesquely situated on a
+sloping site in a rich undulating country. On the adjacent
+Borough Hill are extensive earthworks, and the discovery of
+remains here and at Burnt Walls, immediately south, proves the
+existence of a considerable Roman station. The chief industry
+of the town is the manufacture of boots and shoes. The borough
+is under a mayor, four aldermen and twelve councillors. Area,
+3633 acres.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the Roman remains on Borough Hill, nothing is
+known of the town itself until the time of the Domesday Survey,
+when the manor consisting of eight hides belonged to the countess
+Judith, the Conqueror&rsquo;s niece. According to tradition, Daventry
+was created a borough by King John, but there is no extant
+charter before that of Elizabeth in 1576, by which the town
+was incorporated under the name of the bailiff, burgesses and
+commonalty of the borough of Daventry. The bailiff was to
+be chosen every year in the Moot Hall and to be assisted by
+fourteen principal burgesses and a recorder. James I. confirmed
+this charter in 1605-1606, and Charles II. in 1674-1675 granted a
+new charter. The &ldquo;quo warranto&rdquo; rolls show that a market every
+Wednesday and a fair on St Augustine&rsquo;s day were granted to
+Simon son of Walter by King John. The charter of 1576 confirms
+this market and fair to the burgesses, and grants them two
+new fairs each continuing for two days, on Tuesday after Easter
+and on the feast of St Matthew the Apostle. Wednesday is still
+the market day. The town was an important coaching centre, and
+there was a large local industry in the manufacture of whips.
+During the civil wars Daventry was the headquarters of Charles I.
+in the summer of 1645, immediately before the battle of Naseby,
+at which he was defeated. A Cluniac priory founded here shortly
+after the Conquest has left no remains.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVEY OF FERNHURST, HORACE DAVEY,<a name="ar196" id="ar196"></a></span> <span class="sc">Baron</span> (1833-1907),
+English judge, son of Peter Davey, of Horton, Bucks, was
+born on the 30th of August 1833, and educated at Rugby and
+University College, Oxford. He took a double first-class in
+classics and mathematics, was senior mathematical scholar and
+Eldon law scholar, and was elected a fellow of his college. In
+1861 he was called to the Bar at Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn, and read in the
+chambers of Mr (afterwards Vice-Chancellor) Wickens. Devoting
+himself to the Chancery side, he soon acquired a large practice,
+and in 1875 became a Q.C. In 1880 he was returned to parliament
+as a Liberal for Christchurch, Hants, but lost his seat in
+1885. On Gladstone&rsquo;s return to power in 1886 he was appointed
+solicitor-general and was knighted, but had no seat in the House,
+being defeated at both Ipswich and Stockport in 1886; in 1888
+he found a seat at Stockton-on-Tees, but was rejected by that
+constituency in 1892. As an equity lawyer Sir Horace Davey
+ranked among the finest intellects and the most subtle pleaders
+ever known at the English bar. He was standing counsel to the
+university of Oxford, and senior counsel to the Charity Commissioners,
+and was engaged in all the important Chancery suits
+of his time. Among the chief leading cases in which he took a
+prominent part were those of <i>The Mogul Steamship Company</i>
+v. <i>M&lsquo;Gregor</i>, 1892, <i>Boswell</i> v. <i>Coaks</i>, 1884, <i>Erlanger</i> v. <i>New
+Sombrero Company</i>, 1878, and the <i>Ooregum Gold Mines Company</i>
+v. <i>Roper</i>, 1892; he was counsel for the promoters in the trial of
+the bishop of Lincoln, and leading counsel in the Berkeley peerage
+case. In 1862 he married Miss Louisa Donkin, who, with two
+sons and four daughters, survived him. In 1893 he was raised
+to the bench as a lord justice of appeal, and in the next year was
+made a lord of appeal in ordinary and a life peer. He died in
+London on the 20th of February 1907. Lord Davey&rsquo;s great legal
+knowledge was displayed in his judgments no less than at the
+bar. In legislation he took no conspicuous part, but he was
+a keen promoter of the act passed in 1906 for the checking of
+gambling.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">DAVID<a name="ar197" id="ar197"></a></span> (a Hebrew name meaning probably <i>beloved</i><a name="fa1k" id="fa1k" href="#ft1k"><span class="sp">1</span></a>), in the
+Bible, the son of Jesse, king of Judah and Israel, and founder of
+the royal Judaean dynasty at Jerusalem. The chronology of his
+period is uncertain: the usual date, 1055-1015 B.C., is probably
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page854" id="page854"></a>854</span>
+<span class="sidenote">Source.</span>
+thirty years to half a century too early. The books of Samuel
+(strictly, 1 Sam. xvi.-1 Kings ii.), which are our principal source
+for the history of David, show how deep an impression
+the personality of the king, his character, his
+genius and the romantic story of his early years had left on the
+mind of the nation. Of no hero of antiquity do we possess so
+life-like a portrait. Minute details and traits of character are
+portrayed with a vividness which bears all the marks of contemporary
+narrative. But the record is by no means all of one piece
+or of one date. This history, as we now have it, is extracted
+from various sources of unequal value, which are fitted together
+in a way which offers considerable difficulties to the critic. In
+the history of David&rsquo;s early adventures, for example, the
+narrative is not seldom disordered, and sometimes seems to
+repeat itself with puzzling variations of detail, which have led
+critics to the unanimous conclusion that the First Book of
+Samuel is drawn from at least two sources. It is indeed easy to
+understand that the romantic incidents of this period were much
+in the mouths of the people&mdash;to whom David was a popular
+hero&mdash;and in course of time were written down in various forms
+which were not combined into perfect harmony by later editors,
+who gave excerpts from several sources rather than a new and
+independent history. These excerpts, however, have been so
+pieced together, that it is often impossible to separate them with
+precision, and to distinguish accurately between earlier and later
+elements. It even appears from a study of the Greek text that
+some copies of the books of Samuel incorporated narratives
+which other copies did not acknowledge. For the literary
+problems of these books, see also <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Samuel (Books)</a></span>.</p>
+
+<p>The parallel history of David in 1 Chron. xi.-xxix. contains a
+great deal of additional matter, which can rarely be treated as
+of equal historical value with the preceding. Where it follows
+the chapters in Samuel it is important for textual and other
+critical problems, but it omits narratives in which it is not
+interested (David&rsquo;s youth, persecution by Saul, Absalom&rsquo;s
+revolt, &amp;c.), and adds long passages (David&rsquo;s arrangements for
+the temple, &amp;c.) which reflect the views of a much later age
+than David&rsquo;s. The lists of officers, &amp;c., are fuller than those
+in Samuel, and here and there contain notices of value. A
+comparison of the two records, however, is especially important
+for its illustration of the later tendency to idealize the figure of
+David, and the historical critic has to bear in mind the possibility
+that this tendency had begun long before the Chronicler&rsquo;s time,
+and that it may be found in the relatively older records preserved
+in Samuel.</p>
+
+<p>David&rsquo;s father, Jesse, was a citizen of Bethlehem in Judah,
+5 m. south of Jerusalem; the polite deprecation in 1 Sam.
+xviii. 18 means little (cf. Saul in ix. 21). Tradition
+made him a descendant of the ancient nobles of
+<span class="sidenote">Introduction to Saul.</span>
+Judah through Boaz and the Moabitess Ruth, but the
+tendency to furnish a noble ancestry for a noble figure&mdash;especially
+one of obscure birth&mdash;is widespread (cf. <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Genealogy</a></span>).
+He was the youngest of eight sons,<a name="fa2k" id="fa2k" href="#ft2k"><span class="sp">2</span></a> and spent his youth in an
+occupation which the Hebrews as well as the Arabs seem to have
+held in low esteem. He kept his father&rsquo;s sheep in the desert
+steppes of Judah, and there developed the strength, agility,
+endurance and courage which distinguished him throughout life
+(cf. 1 Sam. xvii. 34, xxiv. 2; 2 Sam. xvii. 9). There, too, he acquired
+that skill in music which led to his first introduction to Saul
+(1 Sam. xvi. 14-23, and the apocryphal Psalm of David, Ps. cli. in
+the Septuagint). He found favour in the king&rsquo;s eye, and became
+his armour-bearer.<a name="fa3k" id="fa3k" href="#ft3k"><span class="sp">3</span></a> But traditions varied. In 1 Sam. xvii. he
+does not follow his master to the field against the Philistines;
+he is an obscure untried shepherd lad sent by his father with
+supplies for his brothers in the Israelite camp. He does not even
+present himself before the king, and his brothers treat him with a
+petulance hardly conceivable if he stood well at court, and it
+appears from the close that neither Saul nor his captain Abner
+had heard of him before (vv. 55-58). There is, indeed, a flat
+contradiction between the two accounts, but a family of Greek
+MSS. represented by the Vatican text omit xvii. 12-31, xvii. 55-xviii.
+ 5, and thus the difficulty is greatly lessened. Characteristic
+of the omitted portions are the friendship which sprang up
+between Jonathan and David and the latter&rsquo;s appointment to a
+command in the army. A further difficulty is caused by 2 Sam.
+xxi. 19, which makes Elhanan the slayer of Goliath. David&rsquo;s
+exploit is not referred to in 1 Sam. xxi. 10-15, xxix., and on this
+and other grounds the simpler tradition in 2 Sam. is usually preferred.
+(See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Goliath</a></span>.) But it must have been by some valiant
+deed that Saul was led to notice him (cf. xiv. 52), and David
+soon became both a popular hero and an object of jealousy
+to Saul. According to the Hebrew text of 1 Sam. xviii., Saul&rsquo;s
+jealousy leaped at once to the conclusion that David&rsquo;s ambition
+would not stop short of the kingship. Such a suspicion would be
+intelligible if we could suppose that the king had heard something
+of the significant act of Samuel, which now stands at the head of
+the history of David in witness of that divine election and unction
+with the spirit of Yahweh on which his whole career hung (xvi.
+1-13). But this passage is the sequel to the rejection of Saul in
+xv., and Samuel&rsquo;s position agrees with that of the late writer in
+vii., viii. and xii.<a name="fa4k" id="fa4k" href="#ft4k"><span class="sp">4</span></a></p>
+
+<p>The shorter text, represented by the Septuagint, gives an
+account of Saul&rsquo;s jealousy which is psychologically more
+intelligible.<a name="fa5k" id="fa5k" href="#ft5k"><span class="sp">5</span></a> According to this text Saul was simply
+possessed with such a personal dislike and dread of
+<span class="sidenote">Conflicts with Saul.</span>
+David as might easily occupy his disordered brain.
+To be quit of his hateful presence he gave him a military
+command. In this charge David increased his reputation
+as a soldier and became a general favourite. Saul&rsquo;s daughter
+Michal loved him; and her father, whose jealousy continued to
+increase, resolved to put the young captain on a perilous enterprise,
+promising him the hand of Michal as a reward of success,
+but secretly hoping that he would perish in the attempt. David&rsquo;s
+good fortune did not desert him; he won his wife, and in this new
+advancement continued to grow in the popular favour, and to
+gain fresh laurels in the field. At this point it is necessary to
+look back on the proposed marriage of David with Saul&rsquo;s eldest
+daughter Merab (xviii. 17-19; cf. xvii. 2-5). When the time
+came for Saul to fulfil his promise, Merab was given to Adriel of
+Abel-Meholah (perhaps an Aramaean). What is said of this
+affair interrupts the original context of chap. xviii., to which the
+insertion has been clumsily fitted by an interpolation in the
+second half of ver. 21 (LXX omits). We have here, therefore, a
+notice drawn from a distinct source which connects itself with
+the other omitted passage, xvii. 12-31, where Saul had promised
+his daughter to the one who should overthrow Goliath (ver. 25).
+Since Merab and Michal are confounded in 2 Sam. xxi. 8, the
+whole episode of Merab and David perhaps rests on a similar
+confusion of names.</p>
+
+<p>As the king&rsquo;s son-in-law, David was necessarily again at court.
+He became chief of the bodyguard, as Ewald rightly interprets
+1 Sam. xxii. 14, and ranked next to Abner (xx. 25), so that Saul&rsquo;s
+insane fears were constantly exasperated by personal contact
+with him. On at least one occasion the king&rsquo;s frenzy broke out
+in an attempt to murder David with his own hand.<a name="fa6k" id="fa6k" href="#ft6k"><span class="sp">6</span></a> At another
+time Saul actually gave commands to assassinate his son-in-law,
+but the breach was made up by Jonathan, whose chivalrous
+spirit had united him to David in a covenant of closest friendship
+(xix. 1-7). The circumstances of the final outburst of Saul&rsquo;s
+hatred, which drove David into exile, are not easily disentangled.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page855" id="page855"></a>855</span>
+The narrative of 1 Sam. xx., which is the principal account of
+the matter, cannot originally have been preceded by xix. 11-24;
+in chap. xx. David appears to be still at court, and Jonathan
+is even unaware that he is in any danger, whereas the preceding
+verses represent him as already a fugitive. It may also be
+doubted whether the narrative of David&rsquo;s escape from his own
+house by the aid of his wife Michal (xix. 11-17) has any close
+connexion with ver. 10, and does not rather belong to a later
+period.<a name="fa7k" id="fa7k" href="#ft7k"><span class="sp">7</span></a> David&rsquo;s daring spirit might very well lead him to visit
+his wife even after his first flight. The danger of such an enterprise
+was diminished by the reluctance to violate the apartments
+of women and attack a sleeping foe, which appears also in Judges
+xvi. 2, and among the Arabs.<a name="fa8k" id="fa8k" href="#ft8k"><span class="sp">8</span></a></p>
+
+<p>According to chap. xx. David was still at court in his usual
+position when he became certain that the king was aiming at his
+life. He betook himself to Jonathan, who thought his suspicions
+groundless, but undertook to test them. A plan was arranged by
+which Jonathan should draw from the king an expression of his
+feelings, and a tremendous explosion revealed that Saul regarded
+David as the rival of his dynasty, and Jonathan as little better
+than a fellow-conspirator. After a final interview (xx. 40-42),
+which must be regarded as a later expansion, they parted and
+David fled. He sought the sanctuary at Nob, where he had been
+wont to consult the priestly oracle (xxii. 15), and here, concealing
+his disgrace by a fictitious story, he also obtained bread from the
+consecrated table and the sword of Goliath (chap. xxi. i-9).<a name="fa9k" id="fa9k" href="#ft9k"><span class="sp">9</span></a>
+His hasty flight&mdash;without food and weapon&mdash;suggests that the
+narrative should follow upon xix. 17.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps after this that David made a last attempt to
+find a place of refuge in the prophetic circle of Samuel at Ramah
+(xix. 18-24). The episode now stands in another
+connexion, where it is certainly out of place. It might,
+<span class="sidenote">Outlaw life.</span>
+however, fit into the break that plainly exists in the
+history at xxi. 10 after the affair at Nob. Deprived of the
+protection of religion as well as of justice, David tried his fortune
+among the Philistines at Gath. Recognized and suspected as a
+redoubtable foe, he made his escape by feigning madness, which
+in the East has inviolable privileges (xxi. 11-16).<a name="fa10k" id="fa10k" href="#ft10k"><span class="sp">10</span></a> The passage
+anticipates chap. xxvii., and it is hardly probable that the slayer
+of Goliath or of any other Philistine giant fled to the Philistines
+with their dead hero&rsquo;s sword. He returned to the wilds of Judah,
+and was joined at Adullam<a name="fa11k" id="fa11k" href="#ft11k"><span class="sp">11</span></a> by his father&rsquo;s house and by a small
+band of outlaws, of which he became the head. Placing his
+parents under the charge of the king of Moab, he took up the life
+of a guerilla captain, cultivating friendly relations with the
+townships of Judah (xxx. 26), which were glad to have on their
+frontiers a protector so valiant as David, even at the expense of
+the blackmail which he levied in return. A clear conception of
+his life at this time, and of the respect which he inspired by the
+discipline in which he held his men, and of the generosity which
+tempered his fiery nature, is given in chap. xxv. His force
+gradually swelled, and he was joined by the prophet Gad (note his
+message xxii. 5) and by the priest Abiathar, the only survivor
+of a terrible massacre by which Saul took revenge for the favours
+which David had received at the sanctuary of Nob. He was
+even able to strike at the Philistines, and to rescue K&#277;&#299;lah (south
+of Adullam and to the east of Beit Jibr&#299;n) from their attack
+(xxiii. 1-13). Forced to flee by the treachery of the very men
+whom he had succoured, he lived for a time in constant fear of
+being captured by Saul, and at length took refuge with Achish
+king of Gath and established himself in Ziklag. Popular tradition,
+as though unwilling to let David escape from Saul, told of
+that king&rsquo;s continual pursuit of the outlaw, of the attempt of the
+men of Ziph (S.E. of Hebron) to betray him, of David&rsquo;s magnanimity
+displayed on two occasions, and of Jonathan&rsquo;s visit to
+console his bosom friend (xxiv.-xxvi.).<a name="fa12k" id="fa12k" href="#ft12k"><span class="sp">12</span></a> The situation was one
+which lent itself to the imagination.</p>
+
+<p>The site of Ziklag is unknown. It hardly lay near Gath
+(probably Tell es-S&#257;fi, 12 m. E. of Ashdod), but rather to the
+south of Judah (Josh. xix. 5). Here he occupied himself in
+chastening the Amalekites and other robber tribes who made
+raids on Judah and the Philistines without distinction (xxvii.).
+The details of the text are obscure, and seem to imply that David
+systematically attacked populations friendly to Achish whilst
+pretending that he had been making forays against Judah. If
+this were an attempt to steer a middle course his true actions
+could not have been kept secret long, and as it is implied that the
+Philistines subsequently acquiesced in David&rsquo;s sovereignty in
+Hebron, it is not easy to see what interest they had in embroiling
+him with the men of Judah. At length, in the second year, he
+was called to join his master in a great campaign against Saul.
+The Philistines for once directed their forces towards the plain of
+Jezreel (Esdraelon) in the north; and Saul, forsaken by Yahweh,
+already gave himself up for lost. David accompanied the army
+as a matter of course. But his presence was not observed
+until they reached their destination, when the jealousy of the
+Philistines overrode his protestations of fidelity and he was
+ordered to return. He reached Ziklag only to find the town
+pillaged by the Amalekites. Pursuing the foes, he inflicted
+upon them a signal chastisement and took a great booty,
+part of which he spent in politic gifts to the leading men of
+the towns in the south country.<a name="fa13k" id="fa13k" href="#ft13k"><span class="sp">13</span></a></p>
+
+<p>Meantime Saul had fallen in battle, and northern Israel was in
+a state of chaos. The Philistines took possession of the fertile
+lowlands of Jezreel and the Jordan, and the shattered forces
+of Israel were slowly rallied by Abner in the remote city of
+Mahanaim in Gilead, under the nominal sovereignty of Saul&rsquo;s son
+Ishbaal. David now took the first great step to the throne. He
+was no longer an outlaw with a band of wandering companions,
+but a petty chieftain, head of a small colony of men, allied with
+families of Caleb and Jezreel (in Judah), and on friendly footing
+<span class="sidenote">King at Hebron.</span>
+with the sheikhs south of Hebron. In response to an
+oracle he was bidden to move northwards to Judah
+and successfully occupied it with Hebron as his capital.
+Here he was anointed king, the first ruler of the southern kingdom.
+If the chronological notice may be trusted, he was then thirty
+years of age, and he reigned there for seven and a half years
+(2. Sam. ii. 1-4<i>a</i>, 11, v. 4 sq.). The noble elegy on the death of
+Saul and Jonathan, quoted from the Book of Jashar (2 Sam. i.),
+is marked by the absence both of religious feeling and of allusions
+to his earlier experiences with Saul which David might have been
+expected to make. It was deemed only natural that he should
+sympathize deeply with the disasters of the northern kingdom.
+His vengeance on the Amalekite who slew Saul&mdash;the account
+is a doublet of 1 Sam. xxxi.&mdash;is consistent with his generous
+treatment of his late adversary in his outlaw life, and with this
+agrees his embassy of thanks to the men of Jabesh-Gilead for their
+chivalrous rescue of the bodies of the fallen heroes (2 Sam. ii. 4<i>b</i>-7).
+The embassy threw out a hint,&mdash;their lord was dead and David
+himself had been anointed king over Judah; but the relation
+between Jabesh-Gilead and Saul had been a close one, and it was
+not to be expected that its eyes would be turned upon the king of
+Judah when Saul&rsquo;s son was installed at the not distant Mahanaim.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page856" id="page856"></a>856</span>
+The interest of the narratives is now directed away from the
+Philistines to the decaying fortunes of Saul&rsquo;s house. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Abner</a></span>
+and <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Saul</a></span>.) Abner had taken Saul&rsquo;s son Ishbaal and his authority
+was gradually consolidated in the north. War broke out between
+the two parties at Gibeon a few miles north of Jerusalem. A
+sham contest was changed into a fatal fray by the treachery of
+Ishbaal&rsquo;s men; and in the battle which ensued Abner was not
+only defeated, but, by slaying Asahel, drew upon himself a blood-feud
+with Joab. The war continued. Ishbaal&rsquo;s party became
+weaker and weaker; and at length Abner quarrelled with his
+nominal master and offered the kingdom to David. The king
+seized the opportunity to demand the return of Michal, his
+wife. The passage (iii. 12-16) is not free from difficulties,
+but it is intelligible that David should desire to ally himself
+as closely as possible with Saul&rsquo;s family (cf. xii. 8). The base
+murder of Abner by Joab did not long defer the inevitable issue
+of events. Ishbaal lost hope, and after he had been foully
+assassinated by two of his own followers, all Israel sought David
+as king.</p>
+
+<p>The biblical narrative is admittedly not so constructed as to
+enable us to describe in chronological order the thirty-three years
+of David&rsquo;s reign over all Israel. It is possible that some of the
+incidents ascribed to this period properly belong to an earlier
+part of his life, and that tradition has idealized the life of David
+the king even as it has not failed to colour the history of David
+the outlaw and king of Hebron.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>In the preceding account the biblical narratives have been
+followed as closely as possible in the light of the critical results
+generally accepted. That they have been affected by the
+growth of popular tradition is patent from the traces
+<span class="sidenote">Critical considerations.</span>
+of duplicate narratives, from the difficulty caused, for
+example, by the story of Goliath (q.v.), and from a closer
+study of the chapters. The later views of the history of this period
+are represented in the book of Chronicles, where immediately after
+Saul&rsquo;s death David is anointed at Hebron king over all Israel
+(1 Chron. xi.). It is quite in harmony with this that the same source
+speaks of the Israelites who joined David at Ziklag (1 Chron. xii.
+1-22), and of the host which came to him at Hebron to turn over to
+him Saul&rsquo;s kingdom (xii. 23-40). This treatment of history can be at
+once corrected by the books of Samuel, but it is only from a deeper
+study of the internal evidence that these, too, appear to give expression
+to doubtful and conflicting views. It is questionable whether
+David could have become king over all Israel immediately after the
+death of Ishbaal. The chronological notices in ii. 10 sqq. allow an
+interval of no less than five and a half years, and nowhere do the
+events of these years appear to be recorded. But David&rsquo;s position
+in the south of Judah is clear. He is related by marriage with south
+Judaean clans of Caleb, Jezreel, and probably Geshur. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Absalom</a></span>.)
+He was at the head of a small colony (1 Sam. xxvii. 3), and on
+friendly terms with the sheikhs south of Hebron (xxx. 26-31).<a name="fa14k" id="fa14k" href="#ft14k"><span class="sp">14</span></a> His
+step forward to Hebron is in every way intelligible and is the natural
+outcome of his policy. It is less easy to trace his previous moves.
+There are gaps in the narratives, and the further back we proceed
+the more serious do their difficulties become. These chapters bring
+him farther north, and they commence by depicting David as a man
+of Bethlehem, high in the court of Saul, the king&rsquo;s son-in-law, and
+a popular favourite with the people. But notwithstanding this, the
+relation is broken off, and years elapse before David gains hold upon
+the Hebrews of north Israel, the weakness of the union being
+proved by the ease with which it was subsequently broken after
+Solomon&rsquo;s death. Much of the life of Saul is obscure, and this too,
+it would seem, because tradition loved rather to speak of the founder
+of the ideal monarchy than of his less successful rival. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Saul</a></span>.)
+It is not impossible that some traditions did not bring them
+together. If Jerusalem and its immediate neighbourhood were first
+conquered by David (2 Sam. v.), it is probable that Beeroth and
+Gibeon (2 Sam. iv. 2, xxi. 2), Shaalbim, Har-heres and Aijalon
+(Judg. i. 35), Gezer (<i>ib.</i> i. 29), Chephirah and Kirjath-jearim (Josh.
+ix. 17) had remained Canaanite. The evidence has obviously some
+bearing upon the history of Saul, as also upon the intercourse between
+Judah and Benjamin which David&rsquo;s early history implies. It has
+been conjectured, therefore, that David&rsquo;s original home lay in the
+south. Since the early historical narrative (1 Sam. xxv. 2) finds
+him in Maon, Winckler has suggested that he was a Calebite chief,
+while a criticism of the details relating to David&rsquo;s family has induced
+Marquart<a name="fa15k" id="fa15k" href="#ft15k"><span class="sp">15</span></a> to conjecture that he was born at Arad (Tell &lsquo;Ar&#257;d)
+about 17 m. S.E. of Hebron. Once indeed we find him in the wilderness
+of Paran 1 (Sam. xxv. 1, LXX reads Maon), and a more southerly
+origin has been thought of (Winckler). This is involved with other
+views of the early history of the Israelites; see further below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>David owed his success to his troop of freebooters (1 Sam.
+xxii. 2), now an organized force, and absolutely attached to his
+person. The valour of these &ldquo;mighty men&rdquo; (<i>gibb&#333;r&#299;m</i>)
+was topical. The names of the most honoured are
+<span class="sidenote">Capture of Jerusalem.</span>
+preserved, and we have some interesting accounts of
+their exploits in the days of the giants (2 Sam. xxi.,
+xxiii.). We hear of two great battles with the &ldquo;Philistines&rdquo; in
+the valley of Rephaim, near Jerusalem, at a time when David&rsquo;s
+base was Adullam (v. 17-25). In one conflict a giant thought
+to slay him, but he was saved by Abishai, the brother of Joab,
+and the men took an oath that David should no more go to battle
+lest he &ldquo;quench the light of Israel.&rdquo; On another occasion,
+Elhanan of Bethlehem slew the giant Goliath of Gath, and
+David&rsquo;s own brother Shimei (or Shammah) overthrew a monster
+who could boast of twenty-four fingers and toes. In yet another
+incident the Philistines maintained a garrison in Bethlehem,
+and David expressed a wish for a drink from its well. The wish
+was gratified at the risk of the lives of three brave men, and he
+recognized the solemnity of the occasion by pouring out the
+water as an offering unto Yahweh.</p>
+
+<p>From a later summary (viii. 1) it seems that the Philistines
+were at length vanquished, and the unknown Metheg-Ammah
+taken out of their hands.<a name="fa16k" id="fa16k" href="#ft16k"><span class="sp">16</span></a> Not until the district was cleared
+could Jerusalem be taken, and the capture of the almost impregnable
+Jebusite fortress furnished a centre for future action.
+Here, in the midst of a region which had been held by aliens, he
+fortified the &ldquo;city of David&rdquo; and garrisoned it with his men.
+Meanwhile the ark of Yahweh, the only sanctuary of national
+significance, had remained in obscurity since its return from the
+Philistines in the early youth of Samuel. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Ark</a></span>.) David
+brought it up from Baalah of Judah with great pomp, and pitched
+a tent for it in Zion, amidst national rejoicings. The narrative
+(2 Sam. vi.) represents the act as that of a loyal and God-fearing
+heart which knew that the true principle of Israel&rsquo;s unity and
+strength lay in national adherence to Yahweh; but the event
+was far from having the significance which later times ascribed
+to it (1 Chron. xiii., xv. sqq.); even Solomon visited the sanctuary
+at Gibeon, and Absalom vowed his vow unto Yahweh at Hebron.
+It was not unnatural that the king who had his palace built by
+Tyrian artists should have proposed to erect a permanent
+temple to Yahweh. Such, at least, was the thought of later
+writers, who have given effect to the belief in chap. viii. It was
+said that the prophet Nathan commanded the execution of this
+plan to be delayed for a generation; but David received at the
+same time a prophetic assurance that his house and kingdom
+should be established for ever before Yahweh.</p>
+
+<p>What remains to be said of his internal policy may be briefly
+detailed. In civil matters the king looked heedfully to the
+execution of justice (viii. 15), and was always accessible
+to the people (xiv. 4). But he does not appear to have
+<span class="sidenote">Internal policy.</span>
+made any change in the old local administration of
+justice, or to have appointed a central tribunal (xv. 2, where,
+however, Absalom&rsquo;s complaint that the king was inaccessible is
+merely factious). A few great officers of state were appointed
+at the court of Jerusalem (viii. 16-18, xx. 23-26), which was
+not without a splendour hitherto unknown in Israel. Royal
+pensioners, of whom Jonathan&rsquo;s son Mephibosheth was one, were
+gathered round a princely table. The art of music was not
+neglected (xix. 35). A more dangerous piece of magnificence was
+the harem. Another innovation was the census; it was undertaken
+despite the protests of Joab, and was checked by the
+rebukes of the prophet Gad and the visitation of a pestilence
+(xxiv.). Striking, too, is the conception of the national God who
+incites the king to do an act for which he was to be punished.<a name="fa17k" id="fa17k" href="#ft17k"><span class="sp">17</span></a>
+To us, the proposal to number the people seems innocent and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page857" id="page857"></a>857</span>
+laudable, and the latest sources of the Pentateuch contain several
+such lists. This new procedure, we may imagine, was resented
+by the northern Hebrews as an encroachment upon their
+liberties. We learn that the destroying angel was stayed at
+the threshing-floor of Araunah the Jebusite,<a name="fa18k" id="fa18k" href="#ft18k"><span class="sp">18</span></a> and the spot thus
+sanctified was made a sanctuary, and commemorated by an
+altar. It was the very place upon which Solomon&rsquo;s temple was
+supposed to be founded. The census-taking may have been a
+preliminary to the great wars, but the latter, on the other hand,
+are obviously presupposed by the extent of his kingdom. For
+his wars a larger force than his early bodyguard was required, and
+the Chronicler gives an account of the way in which an army of
+nearly 300,000 was raised and held by David&rsquo;s thirty heroes
+(1 Chron. xxvii.). It is certain at all events that no small body
+of soldiers would be needed, and this alone would imply that all
+Israel was by this time under his entire control.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from the Ammonite war, our sources are confined to
+a mere summary (viii.), which includes even the Amalekites
+(viii. 12, cf. i Sam. xxx.). After the defeat of the
+Philistines came the turn of Moab. It was under the
+<span class="sidenote">Wars and conquests.</span>
+care of the king of Moab that David placed his parents
+when he fled from Saul (1 Sam. xxii. 3 sqq.), and what led to the
+war is unknown. The severity with which the land was treated
+may pass for a gentle reprisal if the Moabites of that day were
+not more humane than their descendants in the days of King
+Mesha.<a name="fa19k" id="fa19k" href="#ft19k"><span class="sp">19</span></a> A deadly conflict with the Ammonites was provoked by
+a gross insult to friendly ambassadors of Israel;<a name="fa20k" id="fa20k" href="#ft20k"><span class="sp">20</span></a> and this war,
+of which we have pretty full details in 2 Sam. x. i-xi. 1, xii. 26-31,
+assumed unexpected dimensions when the Ammonites procured
+the aid of their Aramean neighbours. The defeat of Hadadezer
+brought about the submission of other lesser kings. The glory of
+this victory was increased by the complete subjugation of Edom
+in a war conducted by Joab with characteristic severity (2 Sam.
+viii. 13; 1 Kings xi. 15-17; Ps. lx., title). The fall of Rabbah
+concludes David&rsquo;s war-like exploits; he carried off the jewelled
+crown of their god (Milcom), and subjected the people, not to
+torture (1 Chron. xx. 3), but to severe menial labour (xii. 26-31).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The Aramean states, Beth-rehob, Maacah, Tob, &amp;c., lay partly to
+the north of Gilead and partly in the region which was the scene of the
+fight with Jabin (Josh. xi. 1-9, Judg. iv.; see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Deborah</a></span>). Apparently
+it was here, too, that the Danites found a settlement (Judg. xviii.
+28); the migration has perhaps been ante-dated. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Dan, tribe</a></span>.)
+The account of David&rsquo;s wars is remarkable for the inclusion of the
+Syrians of Damascus and beyond the Euphrates; some exaggeration
+has been suspected (cf. 2 Sam. viii. 5 with x. 16). Some misunderstanding
+has been caused by the confusion of Edom (<span title="Edom">&#1488;&#1491;&#1501;</span>) and
+Aram (<span title="Aram">&#1488;&#1512;&#1501;</span>) in viii. 13. A more moderate idea of David&rsquo;s power
+has been found in Ps. lx. 6-12, or, preferably, in the description of
+the boundaries (2 Sam. xxiv. 5 sqq.). To the east of the Jordan he
+held rule from Aroer to Gad and Gilead; on its west his power
+extended from Beersheba in the south to Dan and Ijon at the foot
+of Hermon. Moab, Ammon and Edom would appear to have been
+merely tributary, whilst in the north among his allies David could
+number the king of Hamath. To the north-west Israel bordered upon
+Tyre, with whom its relations were friendly. The king of Tyre, who
+recognized David&rsquo;s newly won position (v. 11 seq.), is called Hiram;
+possibly&mdash;unless the notice is an anticipation of 1 Kings v.&mdash;his
+father Abibaal is meant.<a name="fa21k" id="fa21k" href="#ft21k"><span class="sp">21</span></a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As the birth of Solomon is placed before the capture of Rabbah
+of Ammon (xii.), it would appear that David&rsquo;s wars were ended
+within the first half of his reign at Jerusalem, and the
+tributary nations thus do not seem to have attempted
+<span class="sidenote">Internal troubles.</span>
+any revolt during his lifetime (see 1 Kings xi. 14 sqq.
+and 25). It was only when the nation was no longer knit
+together by the fear of danger from without that the internal
+difficulties of the new kingdom became more manifest. Such at
+least is the impression which the narratives convey.<a name="fa22k" id="fa22k" href="#ft22k"><span class="sp">22</span></a> So, after
+David had completed a series of conquests which made Palestine
+the greatest of the petty states of the age, troubles arose with the
+Israelites, who in times past had sought for him to be king (iii.
+17, v. 1-3), with his old subjects the men of Judah, and with
+the members of his own household. The northern tribes, who
+appear to have submitted willingly to his rule, were not all of one
+mind. There were men of stronger build than the weak Ishbaal
+and the crippled son of Jonathan, the survivors of Saul&rsquo;s house,
+and it is only to be expected that David&rsquo;s first care must have
+been to cement the union of the north and south. The choice of
+Jerusalem, standing on neutral ground, may be regarded as a
+stroke of genius, and there is nothing to show that the king
+exercised that rigour which was to be the cause of his grandson&rsquo;s
+undoing. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Rehoboam</a></span>.) On the other hand, when Sheba,
+probably one of Saul&rsquo;s clan, headed a rising and was promptly
+pursued by Joab to Abel-beth-maacah on the west of Dan,
+honour was satisfied by the death of the rebel, and no further
+steps were taken (xx.).<a name="fa23k" id="fa23k" href="#ft23k"><span class="sp">23</span></a> This policy of leniency towards Israel
+is characteristic of David, and may well have become a popular
+theme in the tales of succeeding generations. This same magnanimity
+towards the survivors of Saul&rsquo;s house has left its mark upon
+many of the narratives, and helps to a truer understanding of the
+stories of his early life. Thus it was quite in keeping with the
+romantic attachment between David and Saul&rsquo;s son Jonathan
+that when he became king of Israel he took Jonathan&rsquo;s son
+Meribbaal under his care (ix.).<a name="fa24k" id="fa24k" href="#ft24k"><span class="sp">24</span></a> The deed was not merely
+generous, it was politic to have Saul&rsquo;s grandson under his eyes.
+The hope of restoring the lost kingdom had not died out (cf.
+xvi. 3). But from another source we gain quite a different idea
+of the relations. A disastrous famine ravaged the land for three
+long years, and when Yahweh was consulted the reply came that
+there was &ldquo;blood upon Saul and upon his house because he put
+the Gibeonites to death.&rdquo; The unavenged blood was the cause
+of divine anger, and retribution must be made. This David
+recognized, and, summoning the injured clan, inquired what
+expiation could be made. Bloodshed could only be atoned by
+blood-money or by shedding the blood of the offender or of
+his family. The Gibeonites demanded the latter, and five sons
+of Merab (the text by a mistake reads Michal) and two sons of
+Saul&rsquo;s concubine were sacrificed. The awful deed took place at
+the beginning of harvest (April-May), and the bodies remained
+suspended until, with the advent of the autumn rains, Yahweh
+was once more reconciled to his land (xxi. 1-14). The incident
+is a valuable picture of crude ideas of Yahweh, and, if nothing
+else were needed, it was sufficient to involve David in a feud
+with the Benjamites.<a name="fa25k" id="fa25k" href="#ft25k"><span class="sp">25</span></a> Here, too, we learn of the tardy burial of
+the bones of Saul and Jonathan which had remained in Jabesh-Gilead
+since the battle of Gilboa;&mdash;the history of David&rsquo;s dealings
+with the family of Saul has been obscured. That he took over
+his harem is only in accordance with the Eastern policy (cf. xii. 8).</p>
+
+<p>The harem, an indispensable part of Eastern state, was responsible
+for many fatal disorders, although it is clear from 2 Sam.
+xvi. 21 that the nation at large was not very sensitive
+to the enormities which flow from this system. David&rsquo;s
+<span class="sidenote">Absalom&rsquo;s revolt.</span>
+deep fall in the matter of Bathsheba (xi.) was too great
+an iniquity to be passed over lightly, and the base murder of her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page858" id="page858"></a>858</span>
+husband Uriah the Hittite could not go unavenged. Bathsheba&rsquo;s
+influence added a new element of danger to the usual jealousies of
+the harem, and two of David&rsquo;s sons perished in vain attempts to
+claim the throne, which she appears to have viewed as the rightful
+inheritance of her own child. This, at least, is certain in the
+revolt of Adonijah (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Solomon</a></span>), and it was probably believed
+that the action of the impulsive Absalom arose from the suspicion
+that the birth of Solomon was the death-blow to his succession.</p>
+
+<p>As a piece of writing the vivid narratives are without an equal.
+David&rsquo;s sons were estranged from one another, and acquired
+all the vices of Oriental princes. The severe impartiality of the
+sacred historian has concealed no feature in this dark picture,&mdash;the
+brutal passion of Amnon, the shameless counsel of the wily
+Jonadab, the &ldquo;black scowl&rdquo;<a name="fa26k" id="fa26k" href="#ft26k"><span class="sp">26</span></a> that rested on the face of Absalom
+through two long years of meditated revenge, the panic of the
+court when the blow was struck and Amnon was assassinated in
+the midst of his brethren. Not until five years had elapsed was
+Absalom fully reconciled with his father. Then he meditated
+revolt. As heir-apparent he collected a bodyguard, and studiously
+courting personal popularity by a pretended interest in
+the administration of kingly justice, ingratiated himself with the
+mass. Four years later (so read in xv. 7) he ventured to raise the
+standard of revolt in Hebron, with the malcontent Judaeans as
+his first supporters, and the crafty Ahithophel as his chief adviser.
+Arrangements had been made for the simultaneous proclamation
+of Absalom in all parts of the land. The surprise was complete,
+and David was compelled to evacuate Jerusalem, where he might
+have been crushed before he had time to rally his faithful subjects.
+He was warmly received by the Gileadites, and the first battle
+destroyed the party of Absalom, who was himself captured and
+slain by Joab. Then all the people repented except the men of
+Judah, who were not to be conciliated without a virtual admission
+of prerogative of kinship to the king. This concession involved
+important consequences. The precedence claimed by Judah was
+challenged by the northern tribes even on the day of David&rsquo;s
+victorious return to his capital, and a rupture ensued, headed by
+Sheba, which but for the energy of Joab might have led to a
+second and more dangerous rebellion.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Several indications suggest that the revolt was one in which the
+men of Judah originally took the leading if not the only part. The
+unruly clans which David knew how to control when he was at
+Ziklag or Hebron were doubtless ready to support the rebellious son.
+The removal of the court to Jerusalem provided a suitable opportunity,
+and an element of jealousy even may not have been wanting.
+If Geshur be the district in Josh. xiii. 2, 1 Sam. xxvii. 8, it is significant
+that the scene of Absalom&rsquo;s exile lay to the south, that
+Ahithophel was a south Judaean, and that Amasa probably belonged
+to the Jezreel<a name="fa27k" id="fa27k" href="#ft27k"><span class="sp">27</span></a> with which David was connected through his wife
+Ahinoam. The eleven years which elapsed between the murder of
+Amnon and the revolt would seem to disprove any connexion between
+the two; the chronology may rest upon the tradition that Solomon
+was twelve years old when he came to the throne. David&rsquo;s hurried
+flight, attended only by his bodyguard, indicates that his position was
+not a very strong one, and it is difficult to connect this with the fact
+that he had already waged the wars mentioned in 2 Sam. viii. and x.
+If his reason for taking refuge in Ishbaal&rsquo;s capital Mahanaim is not
+obvious, it is even more remarkable that he should have been received
+kindly by the Ammonites whom he had previously decimated. On
+the theory that the revolt of Absalom chronologically should precede
+the great wars, a slight correction of the already corrupt text in xvii.
+27 makes Nahash himself David&rsquo;s ally, and accounts for David&rsquo;s
+eagerness to repay to Hanun, the son of Nahash, the kindness which
+he had received from the father (x. 2). That the revolt of Sheba is in
+an impossible position is obvious. Tradition has probably confused
+Benjamite risings with Absalom&rsquo;s misguided enterprise; the parts
+played by Shimei and Meribbaal, at all events, are extremely
+suggestive. See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Absalom</a></span>, <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Ahithophel</a></span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Appendix ascribes to David a song of triumph and some
+exceedingly obscure &ldquo;last words&rdquo; (xxii.-xxiii. 7) which cannot
+be used as historical material. The history of his life
+is immediately continued in 1 Kings i., where his old
+<span class="sidenote">David&rsquo;s life-work.</span>
+age and weakness are for the first time vividly emphasized.
+The events of the remaining years after 2 Sam. xx. are
+left untold, but the Chronicler omits the revolt of Absalom and
+represents the king as busily occupied with schemes concerning
+the future temple. The last spark of his old energy was called
+forth to secure the succession of Solomon against the ambition of
+Adonijah. It is noteworthy that, as in the case of Absalom, the
+pretender, though supported by Joab and Abiathar, found his chief
+stay among the men of Judah (1 Kings i. 9). (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Solomon</a></span>.)</p>
+
+<p>To estimate the work of David it is necessary to take into
+account the situation before and after his period. According to
+the prevailing traditions, Saul at his death had left North Israel
+disunited and humiliated. From this condition David raised the
+land to the highest state of prosperity and glory, and by his
+conquests made the united kingdom the most powerful state of
+the age. To do this other qualities than mere military capacity
+were required. David was not only a great captain, he was a
+national hero in whom all the noblest elements of the Hebrew
+genius were combined. His talent enabled him to weld together
+the mixed southern clans which became incorporated under
+Judah, and to build up a monarchy which represented the
+highest conception of national life possible under the circumstances.
+The structure, it is true, was not permanent. Under
+his successor it began to decay, and in the next generation it fell
+asunder and lived only in the hearts of the people as the proudest
+memory of past history and the prophetic ideal of future glory.<a name="fa28k" id="fa28k" href="#ft28k"><span class="sp">28</span></a>
+Opinion will differ, however, as to the extent to which later ideals
+have influenced the narratives upon which the student of Hebrew
+history and religion is dependent, and how far the reigns of David
+and Solomon altered the face of Hebrew history. The foundation
+of the united monarchy was the greatest advance in the whole
+course of the history of the Israelites, and around it have been
+collected the hopes and fears which a varied experience of monarchical
+government aroused. Many of the narratives furnish a
+vivid picture of the life of David with a minuteness of personal
+detail which has suggested to some that their author was intimately
+acquainted with the events, and, if not a contemporary,
+belonged to the succeeding generation, while to others it has
+seemed more probable that these reflect rather &ldquo;the plastic
+mould of popular tradition.&rdquo; It cannot be doubted that the
+three types of David, represented by the books of Samuel, of
+Chronicles, and the superscriptions of the Psalms, are irreconcilable,
+and that they represent successive developments of the
+original traditions. That the oldest of these three does not
+contain earlier attempts to idealize him is unlikely. &ldquo;Political
+circumstances naturally led to an ever-increasing appreciation of
+his person and his work as the unifier of Israel. In the eyes of
+posterity he became more and more completely the model of an
+Israelitish king and the natural consequence was that he was
+idealized. The hope of the regeneration of his dynasty, and, at
+a later period, of its restoration to the throne&mdash;the Messianic
+expectation&mdash;must have worked powerfully in the same direction.
+And meanwhile the religious convictions of the highest minds in
+Israel were undergoing a marked change. The conceptions of
+Yahweh and of the religion which was acceptable to him were
+constantly being elevated and purified. This could not but have
+an influence on the current ideas concerning David. He, too,
+must be remodelled as the conceptions of God were changed.&rdquo;<a name="fa29k" id="fa29k" href="#ft29k"><span class="sp">29</span></a>
+But what is lost as regards historical material is a distinct gain
+to the study of the development of Hebrew thought and
+philosophy of history.</p>
+
+<p>David&rsquo;s character must be judged partly in the light of the
+times in which he lived and partly in connexion with the great
+truths which he represents, truths whose value is not impaired
+should they prove to be the convictions of later ages. Accordingly,
+David is not to be condemned for failing to subdue the
+sensuality which is the chief stain on his character, but should
+rather be judged by his habitual recognition of a generous
+standard of conduct, by the undoubted purity and lofty justice
+of an administration which was never stained by selfish considerations
+or motives of personal rancour,<a name="fa30k" id="fa30k" href="#ft30k"><span class="sp">30</span></a> and finally by the calm
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page859" id="page859"></a>859</span>
+courage which enabled him to hold an even and noble course in
+the face of dangers and treachery. His great sin in the matter of
+Uriah would have been forgotten but for his repentance: the
+things at which modern ideas are most offended are not always
+those that would have given umbrage to early writers. That he
+did not reform at a stroke all ancient abuses appears particularly
+in relation to the practice of blood revenge; to put an end to this
+deep-rooted custom would have been an impossibility. But it is
+clear from 2 Sam. iii. 28 sqq., xiv. 1-10, that his sympathies
+were against the barbarous usage. Nor is it just to accuse him
+of cruelty in his treatment of enemies. As it was impossible to
+establish a military cordon along the borders of Canaan, it was
+necessary absolutely to cripple the adjoining tribes. From the
+lust of conquest for its own sake David appears to have been
+wholly free.</p>
+
+<p>The generous elevation of David&rsquo;s character is seen most
+clearly in those parts of his life where an inferior nature would
+have been most at fault,&mdash;in his conduct towards Saul, in the
+blameless reputation of himself and his band of outlaws in the
+wilderness of Judah, in his repentance under the rebuke of Nathan
+and in his noble bearing on the revolt of Absalom. His touching
+love for his worthless son is one of the most beautiful descriptions
+of paternal affection. His unfailing insight into character, and
+his power of winning men&rsquo;s hearts and touching their better
+impulses, appear in innumerable traits (e.g. 2 Sam. xiv. 18-20,
+iii. 31-37, xxiii. 15-17), and here, as elsewhere, the charm which
+the life of David has upon its readers is entirely unaffected by
+technical questions of literary and historical criticism.</p>
+
+<p>To the later generations David was pre-eminently the Psalmist
+and the founder of the Temple service. The Hebrew titles ascribe
+to him seventy-three psalms; the Septuagint adds
+some fifteen more; and later opinion, both Jewish
+<span class="sidenote">Growth of tradition.</span>
+and Christian, claimed for him the authorship of the
+whole Psalter (so the Talmud, Augustine and others). That the
+tradition of the titles requires careful sifting is no longer doubted,
+and the results of recent criticism have been to confirm the view
+that &ldquo;it is no longer possible to treat the psalms as a record of
+David&rsquo;s spiritual life through all the steps of his chequered
+career&rdquo; (W. R. Smith, <i>Old Test. in Jew. Church</i>², p. 224). Nor
+can it be maintained that the elaborate ritual ascribed to David
+by the chronicler has any historical value. See further
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Chronicles</a></span>, <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Psalms</a></span>.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>On the other hand, these traditions, however unhistorical in their
+present form, cannot be pure imagination. The male and female
+singers (if the reading be correct) whom Sennacherib carried off from
+Jerusalem in Hezekiah&rsquo;s time, may well have belonged to an old
+foundation (A. Jeremias, <i>Alte Test. im Lichte d. Alten Orients</i>²,
+p. 527), and though David&rsquo;s skill referred to in Amos vi. 5 may be
+due to a gloss, it is a Judaean narrative which tells of the invention
+of music, ascribing it possibly to a Judaean legendary hero
+(Gen. iv. 21). And although the Levitical organization, as ascribed to
+David, is manifestly post-exilic, it is at least certain that many of the
+Levitical families were of southern origin. It is in David&rsquo;s history
+that the clans of the south first attained prominence, and some of
+them are known to have been staunch upholders of a purer worship
+of Yahweh, or to have been associated with the introduction of
+religious institutions among the Israelites. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Levites</a></span>.)</p>
+
+<p>The difficulty of the historical problems increases when the narratives
+of David are more closely studied: (<i>a</i>) 2 Sam. iii. 18, xix. 9
+show that according to one view David delivered <i>Israel</i> (not Judah)
+from the Philistines. This is in contradiction to ii. 8 sqq. (from another
+source), where Saul&rsquo;s son recovers Israelite territory, but is supported
+by ix., where Mephibosheth is found at Lo-debar. This historical
+view has probably left its trace upon the present traditions of Saul,
+whose defeat by the &ldquo;Philistines&rdquo; (here found in the north and not
+as usual in the south) left Israel in much the same position as when
+he was anointed king (cf. 1 Sam. xxxi. 7 with xiii. 7). Again (<i>b</i>) the
+primitive stories of conflicts with &ldquo;Philistine&rdquo; giants between
+Hebron and Jerusalem (2 Sam. v. 17 sqq., xxi. 15 sqq. and xxiii.)
+find their analogy in Caleb&rsquo;s overthrow of the sons of Anak (Judg.
+i. 10; Josh. xv. 14), and in the allusion to the same prehistoric folk
+in the account of the spies (Num. xiii. 28). From a number of points
+of evidence there appears to have been a group of traditions of a
+movement from the south (probably Kadesh, Num. xiii. 26) associated
+with Caleb, David and the Levites. If the clans of Moses&rsquo; kin
+which moved into Judah bore the ark (Num. x. 29 sqq.; see Kenites),
+and if Abiathar carried it before David (1 Kings ii. 26), there were
+traditions of the ark distinct from those which associate it with
+Joshua and Shiloh (cf. 2 Sam. vii. 6). But the stories of conflicts in a
+much larger area than the few cities in the immediate neighbourhood
+of Jerusalem (see above) can scarcely be read with the numerous
+narratives which recount or imply relations between the young David
+of Bethlehem and Saul or the Israelites. It is possible, therefore,
+that one early account of David was that of an entrance into the
+land of Judah, and that round him have gathered traditions partly
+individual and partly tribal or national. See further S. A. Cook,
+<i>Critical Notes on O.T. History</i>, pp. 122 sqq., and art. <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Jews</a></span> (<i>History</i>),
+§§ 6-8.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Literature.</span>&mdash;Robertson Smith&rsquo;s later views subsequent to 1877
+(when he wrote the article on David for this <i>Encyclopaedia</i>) were
+expressed partly in the <i>Old Test. in Jewish Church</i> (1881 and 1892),
+<i>passim</i>, and partly in the article on the Books of Samuel in the <i>Ency.
+Brit.</i> (9th ed.); on David&rsquo;s character see especially his criticism of
+Renan, <i>Eng. Hist. Rev.</i>, 1888, pp. 134 sqq. Mention may be made of
+Stähelin&rsquo;s <i>Leben Davids</i> (Basel, 1866), still valuable for the numerous
+parallels adduced from oriental history; Cheyne&rsquo;s <i>Aids to Devout
+Study of Criticism</i> (1892), a criticism of David&rsquo;s history in its bearing
+upon religion; Marcel Dieulafoy, <i>David the King</i> (1902), full, but
+not critical; H. A. White, Hastings&rsquo; <i>Dict.</i> art. &ldquo;David&rdquo;; Cheyne,
+<i>Ency. Bib.</i> art. &ldquo;David&rdquo;; and (on the romantic element in the
+narratives) Luther in Ed. Meyer, <i>Israeliten und ihre Nachbarstämme</i>
+(1906), pp. 181 sqq.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(W. R. S.; S. A. C.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1k" id="ft1k" href="#fa1k"><span class="fn">1</span></a> See further the third edition of Schrader&rsquo;s <i>Keilinschr. u. das Alte
+Test.</i> pp. 225, 483.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2k" id="ft2k" href="#fa2k"><span class="fn">2</span></a> But four in xvii. 13 sqq., and seven in 1 Chron. ii. 13-15.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3k" id="ft3k" href="#fa3k"><span class="fn">3</span></a> An armour-bearer was not a full warrior but a sort of page or
+apprentice-in-arms, whose most warlike function is to kill outright
+those whom his master has struck down&mdash;an office which among the
+Arabs was often performed by women.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4k" id="ft4k" href="#fa4k"><span class="fn">4</span></a> See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Samuel</a></span>. The older history repeatedly indicates that David&rsquo;s
+kingship was predicted by a divine oracle, but would hardly lead us
+to place the prediction so early (1 Sam. xxv. 30; 2 Sam. iii. 9, v. 2).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5k" id="ft5k" href="#fa5k"><span class="fn">5</span></a> The LXX omits xviii. 1-6 (to &ldquo;Philistine&rdquo;), the first and last
+clauses of 8, 10-11, the reason given for Saul&rsquo;s fear in 12, 17-19,
+the second half of 21. It also modifies 28, and omits the second
+half of 29 and the whole of 30.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6k" id="ft6k" href="#fa6k"><span class="fn">6</span></a> 1 Sam. xix. 9. The parallel narrative, xviii. 10 sqq., is wanting in
+the Greek, and in the light of subsequent events is improbable.
+Its aim is to paint Saul&rsquo;s character as black as possible.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft7k" id="ft7k" href="#fa7k"><span class="fn">7</span></a> The close of ver. 10 in the Hebrew is corrupt, and the words
+&ldquo;(and it came to pass) that night&rdquo; seem to belong to the next
+verse (so the Greek). H. P. Smith suggests that the passage originally
+followed upon xviii. 27.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft8k" id="ft8k" href="#fa8k"><span class="fn">8</span></a> Wellhausen cites a closely parallel case from Sprenger&rsquo;s <i>Leben
+Muhammad</i>, vol. ii. p. 543.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft9k" id="ft9k" href="#fa9k"><span class="fn">9</span></a> On the meaning of this difficult passage, see the discussions by
+W. R. Smith, <i>Religion of the Semites</i>(²), p. 455 sqq., and Schwally
+<i>Semit. Kriegsalterthümer</i>, p. 60 sqq.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft10k" id="ft10k" href="#fa10k"><span class="fn">10</span></a> Interesting parallels in Barhebraeus <i>Chron.</i>, ed. Brun and
+Kirsch, p. 222, and Ewald, <i>Hist. Israel</i>, iii. p. 84.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft11k" id="ft11k" href="#fa11k"><span class="fn">11</span></a> The cave of Adullam has been traditionally placed (since the
+12th century) at Khareit&#363;n, two hours&rsquo; journey south of Bethlehem.
+But the town of Adullam, which has not been identified with any
+certainty, lay in the low country of Judah (Josh. xv. 35). The
+&ldquo;cave&rdquo; is also spoken of as a &ldquo;hold&rdquo; or fortress, and this is everywhere
+the true reading. The name has been identified with &lsquo;<i>&#298;d-el-m&#257;</i>
+(or -<i>miy&#275;</i>) about 12 m. S.W. of Bethlehem.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft12k" id="ft12k" href="#fa12k"><span class="fn">12</span></a> According to a late Rabbinical story, David, like Bruce of
+Scotland, was once saved by a spider which spun its web over the
+cave wherein he was concealed.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft13k" id="ft13k" href="#fa13k"><span class="fn">13</span></a> The law of the distribution of booty after war enacted by David
+(xxx. 24 sqq.) is given as a Mosaic precedent in the post-exilic priestly
+legislation (Num. xxxi. 27). On the importance of this explicit
+statement, see W. R. Smith, <i>Old Test. in Jewish Church</i>(²), 386 sq.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft14k" id="ft14k" href="#fa14k"><span class="fn">14</span></a> Bethel (ver. 27) is probably the Bethuel near Ziklag (1 Chron. iv.
+30). David&rsquo;s friendly relations with the Philistines find a parallel
+in Isaac&rsquo;s covenant with Abimelech (q.v.). In Ps. xxxiv. the latter
+name actually appears in place of Achish.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft15k" id="ft15k" href="#fa15k"><span class="fn">15</span></a> <i>Fundamente Israel. u. jüd. Gesch.</i> (1896), pp. 23 sqq.; see also
+Winckler, <i>Gesch. Isr.</i> i. 24; <i>Keilinschr. u. d. Alte Test.</i>(³), p. 228 sqq.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft16k" id="ft16k" href="#fa16k"><span class="fn">16</span></a> 1 Chron. xviii. 1 reads &ldquo;Gath and her dependent villages&rdquo;; the
+original reading is a matter for conjecture.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft17k" id="ft17k" href="#fa17k"><span class="fn">17</span></a> Cf. the idea in 1 Kings xxii. 19-23; Ezek. xiv. 9; contrast
+1 Chron. xxi. 1.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft18k" id="ft18k" href="#fa18k"><span class="fn">18</span></a> This un-Hebraic name, which is not unlike <i>ar&#333;n</i>, &ldquo;ark,&rdquo; should
+possibly be corrected to Adonijah (Cheyne, <i>Ency. Bib. s.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft19k" id="ft19k" href="#fa19k"><span class="fn">19</span></a> David destroyed two-thirds of the Moabites&mdash;presumably of
+their fighting men (2 Sam. viii. 2); Mesha destroys the inhabitants
+of the captured cities in honour of his god Chemosh.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft20k" id="ft20k" href="#fa20k"><span class="fn">20</span></a> It finds a parallel in the fate of the heralds of Orchomenus (Frazer,
+<i>Pausan</i>. v. 135) and in an Arabian story (Ibn Ath&#299;r, viii. 360;
+Nöldeke in Budde, <i>Hand-Commentar, ad loc.</i>); cf. also Ewald, iii.
+152.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft21k" id="ft21k" href="#fa21k"><span class="fn">21</span></a> On the questions raised see the commentaries upon 2 Sam. viii.
+and x. and the <i>Ency. Biblica, s.vv.</i> &ldquo;David,&rdquo; &ldquo;Merom,&rdquo; &ldquo;Zobah.&rdquo;
+The main problem is whether the account of David&rsquo;s rule has been
+exaggerated, or whether the attempt has been made to throw back
+to the time of the first king of all Israel later political conditions.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft22k" id="ft22k" href="#fa22k"><span class="fn">22</span></a> Viz. the present position of 2 Sam. ix.-xx. after the miscellaneous
+collection of details in v.-viii. See, on the other hand, the view of
+1 Kings v. 3, 4.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft23k" id="ft23k" href="#fa23k"><span class="fn">23</span></a> The present position of this incident, immediately after Absalom&rsquo;s
+rebellion was quelled, is almost inconceivable (Winckler, H. P.
+Smith, B. Luther, Ed. Meyer). See next page.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft24k" id="ft24k" href="#fa24k"><span class="fn">24</span></a> He was five years of age at the battle of Gilboa (iv. 4), and is now
+grown up and with a young child (ix. 12). But the narrative loses
+its point unless David&rsquo;s kindness &ldquo;for Jonathan&rsquo;s sake&rdquo; comes at an
+early date soon after he became king, and although the youth is found
+at Lo-debar (east of the Jordan) under the protection of Machir, the
+independent fragment in ii. 8 sqq. implies that the Israelites had
+recovered the position they had lost at the battle of Gilboa.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft25k" id="ft25k" href="#fa25k"><span class="fn">25</span></a> There is an unmistakable reference to the occurrence in the episode
+of Shimei, who hovers in the background of Absalom&rsquo;s revolt with a
+large body of men at his command (xvi. 7 sqq.).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft26k" id="ft26k" href="#fa26k"><span class="fn">26</span></a> If Ewald&rsquo;s brilliant interpretation of an obscure word in 2 Sam.
+xiii. 32 be correct.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft27k" id="ft27k" href="#fa27k"><span class="fn">27</span></a> &ldquo;Israelite&rdquo; (2 Sam. xvii. 25) is a very unnecessary designation;
+1 Chron. ii. 17 would make him an Ishmaelite.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft28k" id="ft28k" href="#fa28k"><span class="fn">28</span></a> See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Hebrew Religion</a></span>, <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Messiah</a></span>, <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Prophet</a></span>.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft29k" id="ft29k" href="#fa29k"><span class="fn">29</span></a> Kuenen, &ldquo;The Critical Method,&rdquo; <i>Modern Review</i>, 1880, p. 701
+(<i>Gesammelte Abhandlungen</i>, Germ. ed. by Budde, p. 33).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft30k" id="ft30k" href="#fa30k"><span class="fn">30</span></a> His charges to Solomon in 1 Kings ii. 5-9 do not arise necessarily
+from motives of revenge; a young and untried sovereign could not
+afford to continue the clemency which his father was strong enough to
+extend to dangerous enemies. Apart from this, it is possible that the
+words have been written to shift from Solomon&rsquo;s shoulders the bloodshed
+incurred in establishing his throne.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="art" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
+Edition, Volume 7, Slice 9, by Various
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