Among his
writings
are three volumes on Eng.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v29 - BIographical Dictionary
He was the author of a number of novels
and other prose writings. His best work is
(Venice, the City of the Sea) (2 vols. , 1853).
He contributed to the New World Magazine
seven historical romances, based on the dramas
of Victor Hugo. Edmond Dantès,' a sequel
to (Monte Cristo,' was written by him, as also
were Mary Tudor) and other dramas.
Flagg, Wilson. An American naturalist,
scientific and political writer; born in Beverly,
Mass. , Nov. 5, 1805; died in North Cambridge,
Mass. , May 6, 1884. Some of his books are:
"Studies in the field and Forest) (1857); (Hal-
cyon Days); A Year among the Trees) (1881);
and A Year among the Birds. ?
Flammarion, Camille ( Ha-ma-re-ôn”). A
French astronomer, writer on descriptive as-
tronomy, and (astronomical novelist); born
in Montigny-le-Roi, Feb. 25, 1842. He was
designed by his parents for the Church, but
went over to science, and by a long course of
writings of a more or less popular character
has made his name widely known. ( The Plural-
ity of Inhabited Worlds) (1862); (Celestial
Wonders) (1865); (The Atmosphere) (1872);
(Urania) ( 1889 ); and “The Planet Mars and
its Habitability) (1892), are his best-known
works, not to mention an experiment or two
in romance of the astronomical creation. "
Flash, Henry Lynden. An American writer
of verse; born in Cincinnati, O. , Jan. 20, 1835.
He is the author of Poems) (1860), and of
many popular ballads which appeared during
the Civil War.
Flassan, Gaétan Raxis, Count de (fläs-än').
A French diplomatist and historian of diplo-
macy; born at Bedouin, Venaissin, 1770; died
in Paris, March 20, 1845. His career in the
diplomatic service was fairly distinguished,
enabling him to gather material for a valu-
able History of French Diplomacy from the
Foundation of the Monarchy to Aug. 10, 1792)
(1808-11), and one or two works of less im-
portance.
Flaubert, Gustav (fő-bãr'). A distinguished
French novelist; born at Rouen, Dec. 12, 1821 ;
died there, May 8, 1880. His greatest novel
was his first, Madame Bovary) (1857). He
next wrote a historical novel, “Salammbộ, the
scene laid in the most fourishing period of
Carthage,-a splendid description of ancient
Punic life, but having lively interest as a story;
(The History of a Young Man (1869), like
Madame Bovary) a pessimistic picture of so-
cial life; (The Temptation of St. Anthony)
(1874), a piece of imaginative writing dealing
with philosophical problems; and (Three Sto-
ries) (1877), which had a favorable reception.
The posthumous novel ( Bouvard and Pécuchet)
(1881) is a satire on humanity in general. His
comedy (The Candidate) (1874) failed on the
stage. *
Fléchier, Esprit (fā-shyā'). A notable
French pulpit orator and writer; born at
Pernes, in the Venaissin, June 10, 1632 ; died at
Montpellier, Feb. 16, 1710. His funeral orations,
especially those on Montausier and Turenne,
are models of elegiac oratory. He wrote a
(History of Theodosius the Great' (1679);
(Panegyrics of aints ) (1690); History of
Cardinal Ximenes) (1693).
Fleming, George. See Fletcher, Julia.
Fleming, Mrs. May Agnes (Early). A
Canadian story-writer; born in New Brunswick,
1840; died 1880. She was a prolific author of
romances, mostly sersational, among them be-
ing: Guy Earlscourt's Wife); Lost for a
Woman); (Pride and Passion); etc.
Fleming, Paul (flem'ing). A distinguished
German poet; born at Hartenstein in Saxony,
Oct. 5, 1609; died at Hamburg, April 2, 1640.
As an attaché of an embassy to Russia and Per-
sia, he had an opportunity (1635-39) of studying
many peoples. His "German Poems, which
appeared in 1642, were often republished. His
poetry is a true reflection of his inmost thought :
he is seen to be a man of unsophisticated tastes,
of childlike piety, and yet of virile sense and
passion. *
Fletcher, Giles. An English clergyman and
poet, cousin to John; born in London about
1580; died at Aldertoni in 1623. His only
notable composition was a sacred poem en-
titled (Christ's Victorie and Triumph in Heaven
and Earth over and after Death (1610), rich
in imagery and descriptions of natural scenery.
Parts of it were utilized by Milton in his
Paradise Regained. '
Fletcher, John. An English dramatist; born
in Rye, Sussex, in December 1579; died in Lon-
don during the plague, in August 1625. His
partnership with Beaumont is called by Swin-
burne “the most perfect union in genius and
friendship. ” (The Woman Hater,' published
anonymously in 1607 and usually accorded to
Fletcher, Swinburne and Bullen assign to Beau-
mont. Fletcher survived his friend nine years,
during which he produced many plays with and
without collaborators; the latter include Mas-
singer, Middleton, Rowley, Shirley, and others.
It is certain that he wrote alone (The Faithful
Shepherdess, Bonduca, Valentinian, (The
Wild Goose Chase, and Monsieur Thomas,
his greatest works; Rule a Wife and Have a
Wife); (The Loyal Subject); (Wit Without
Money); A Wife for a Month); (The Chances);
(The Mad Lover); and (The Humorous Lieu-
tenant. Bullen, the most authoritative critic
of Elizabethan literature, says he had Massin-
ger's aid in “The Knight of Malta,' (Thierry
and Theodoret, (The Little French Lawyer,'
(The Beggar's Bush,' (The Spanish Curate,
(The False One,' and (A Very Woman. The
same authority gives (The Queen of Corinth)
with Massinger, Rowley, and Middleton ; (The
Jeweller of Amsterdam) with Massinger and
Field ; (The Bloody Brother) with Ben Jonson,
revised by Middleton ; (Two Noble Kinsmen)
with Massinger, after Shakespeare's death; and
considers (Henry VIII. the work of Fletcher
a
## p. 192 (#208) ############################################
192
FLETCHER-FOGAZZARO
and Massinger with Shakespearean passages.
* (See Beaumont and Fletcher. ')
Fletcher, Julia Constance. (“George Flem-
ing. ”] An American novelist; born in Rio
Janeiro, Brazil, about 1850; daughter of James
C. Fletcher, who was a missionary to Brazil
and wrote (Brazil and the Brazilians. Among
her novels are : Kismet) (1877); “The Head
of the Medusa (1880); (Andromeda) (1885);
(The Truth about Clement Ker' (1889); and
(For Plain Women Only. '
Fleury, Claude (flė-re'). A French Church
historian and pedagogue; born in Paris, Dec.
6, 1640; died there (? ), July 14, 1723. His
learning and unaffected simplicity made him
a notable figure at the court of Louis XIV. , and
later at that of Louis XV. , whose confessor he
became. An Ecclesiastical History' (1691-
1720) forms his claim to enduring renown;
the work coming down to 1414, at which point
a later writer has attempted, although not sym-
pathetically, to round out the master's perform-
ance. A History of French Law) (1674) and
a Historical Catechism' (1679) are less im-
portant achievements.
Fleury-Husson, Jules. See Champfleury.
Flint, Timothy. An American clergyman
and miscellaneous writer; born in North Read-
ing, Mass. , July 11, 1780; died in Salem, Mass. ,
Aug. 16, 1840. He was a Congregational min-
ister during 1812-14; subsequently he devoted
himself to editorial work, descriptive writing,
and fiction. In these departments his most
important work is included in: (The Geogra-
phy and History of the Mississippi Valley);
(Indian Wars in the West); and in fiction,
Francis Berrian); “George Mason); and “The
Shoshone Valley. )
Floquet, Pierre Amable (fő-kā'). A French
historian and biographical writer; born in
Rouen, July 9, 1797; died in Formentin, Aug. 6,
1881. He made Normandy's annals and per-
sonages the objects of his painstaking study
in Norman Anecdotes); History of the Par-
liament of Normandy) (1840-43); (Studies in
the Life of Bossuet! (1855); of which the last
two were crowned by the Academy. Subse-
quent volumes show the rich harvest the field
has yielded him.
Florez, Henrique (fõ'reth). A Spanish his-
torian and antiquarian; born in Valladolid,
Feb. 14, 1701; died in Madrid, Aug. 20, 1773.
He was an Augustinian ordinary who taught
theology and history with brilliant success,
and charmed his classes by presenting dogmas
and annals from the standpoint of their human
interest. “Sacred Spain) (1747-73), on the his-
tory and dominion of the Church in the penin-
sula, brought down to the present time by a
recent writer; “Memorials of Catholic Queens);
and other works of importance, justify the high
opinion entertained of him.
Florian, Jean Pierre Claris de (fő-ryon').
A French poet and romancer (1755-94). At
10 he captivated Voltaire by his quick repartee
and sprightliness. He made his debut with
some pleasing farces (1779), and added greatly
to his fame with the two pastoral stories (Gala-
tea' (1783) and Estelle (1787); but both are
sentimental romances in the dominant taste of
that time. A like judgment is to be passed on
his metrical romances Numa Pompilius) (1786)
and (Gonsalvo of Cordova) (1791). He also
wrote (Medleys of Poetry and Literature); and
(Florian's Youth,' in which he recounts the
story of his boyhood. *
Flourens, Marie Jean Pierre (flö-ron'). An
eminent French writer on physiology and anat-
omy; born in Maurilhan, Hérault, April 15,
1794; died at Montgeron, near Paris, Dec. 5,
1867. His special studies were neurology, oste-
ology, and cellular pathology. The following
partial list of his writings indicates his wide
scope and massive knowledge: Physical Re-
searches into Irritability and Sensibility) (1822);
(General Anatomy of the Skin and of its Mu-
cous Membranes) (1843); Life and Intelli-
gence) (1857); Natural Ontology) (1864); and
works in which he traces with admirable lucid-
ity the connection between the respective as-
pects of physical, intellectual, and ethical states.
Flower, Benjamin Orange. An American
editor and author; born in Illinois in 1859.
He was until recently the publisher and editor
of the Arena, Boston, Mass. Among his nu-
merous works are: (Civilization's Inferno; or
Studies in the Social Cellar (1893); (The New
Time) (1894); Persons, Places, and Ideas);
"Gerald Massey: Poet, Prophet, and Mystic)
(1895). He is now editor of The New Time.
Flower, Frank Abial. An American histor-
ical writer; born in Cottage, N. Y. , May 11, 1854.
Has written several local histories. Among
his works are to be found : (Old Abe, the Wis-
consin War Eagle) (1880); (The Life of Mat-
thew H. Carpenter) (1883); and a (History of
the Republican Party) (1884). He is curator
of the Wisconsin Historical Society.
Flügel, Johann Gottfried (flü'gel). A Ger-
man lexicographer and compiler of language
manuals; born in Barby on the Elbe, Nov. 22,
1788; died in Leipsic, June 24, 1855. He spent
many years in this country in business, diplo-
matic, and official occupations, and compiled
(with J. Sporschil) a (Complete English-Ger-
man and German-English Dictionary) (1830),
besides publishing A Series of Commercial
Letters) (9th ed. 1874); Practical Handbook
of English Business Correspondence) (9th ed.
1873); (Triglot; or Mercantile Dictionary in
Three Tongues — German, English, French)
(2d ed. 1854); and other useful manuals, all
revised, or brought down to contemporary
needs, by his son.
Flygare-Carlén. See Carlén.
Fogazzaro, Antonio (fő-gäts-är'o). An Ital.
ian poet and story-teller; born at Vicenza, 1842.
He first came into notice with Miranda, a
story in verse (1874), and added greatly to his
reputation as a poet with Valsonda,' a volume
## p. 193 (#209) ############################################
FOGLAR - FONTENELLE
193
-e. 8
of lyrics (1876). He is author of several novels
which were received with marked favor, among
them (Master Chicco's Fiasco) (1885); Daniel
Cortis) (1887); (The Poet's Mystery) (1888).
Foglar, Ludwig (fõ'glär). An Austrian poet;
born in Vienna, Dec. 24, 1819; died at Kam-
mer, Aug. 15, 1889. Among his poems, mostly
lyric, are (Cypresses) (1842); “Sunbeams and
Shadows) (1846); (Clara von Vissegrad) an
epic (1847); (Freedom's Breviary) (1848); Joy.
ful and Sorrowful' (1867); (Saint Velocipede)
(1869), a satire (under the pseudonym Leb-
erecht Flott”).
Fokke Simonsz, Arend (fok'é). A Dutch
essayist; born at Amsterdam, July 2, 1755; died
there, Nov. 15, 1812. All his writings, especially
his (Catechism of Arts and Sciences) (11 vols. ,
1785-1804), give proof of the extraordinary
compass of his learning; but he is most cele-
brated for his popular scientific works, mostly
written in a burlesque or a satiric vein. From
him we have the delightful literary satires (The
Modern Helicon (1792) and (Apollo, Sergeant
of the Burghers' Guard); Life of Lucifer)
(1799), a history of demonology in form of a
comic romance; the psychological disquisition
(The Different Aspects of Human Life) (1786);
(Woman Is Boss) (1807).
Folengo, Teofilo (fő-len'go). [Pseudonym
"Merlino Coccajo. ”] An Italian poet (1491-
1554). He was the first to win fame as a writer
of macaronic verses. His Macaronic Work of
Merlino Coccajo, Mantuan Poet) – first pub-
lished in 17 cantos (1517), and four years later
in 25-comprises the comico-heroic poems
(Baldus) and (Moscæa) (War of the Midges).
His satire is mostly against monachism. He
writes in cynic humor, but under his burlesque
lies a vein of serious purpose : to him Rabelais
owes not a little. Under the pseudonym “Li-
merno Pitocco” he wrote in Italian the epic sat-
ire (Orlandino) (1526) in ridicule of the story
of Roland; then, partly in macaronic, partly in
pure Italian, partly in pure Latin, «The Chaos
of Three by One) (1527), in which he darkly
recounts the events of his own life. He wrote
them while a vagrant from his monastery; he
returned later and composed some religious
poems of little value.
Follen, August (föl'len). A German poet
of patriotism, and popular song writer; born
in Giessen, Jan. 21, 1794; died in Bern, Dec.
26, 1855. He was a little of a soldier, a little
of a lawyer, and a good deal of an enthusiast,
suffering imprisonment for alleged demagogy.
He became intensely popular as the author of
(Sons of Fatherland,' a patriotic hymn; (Ma-
legys and Vivian' (1829), a romance of chivalry ;
and numerous fine translations and poetic ap-
peals to the instinct for liberty.
Follen, Eliza Lee (Cabot). An American
prose-writer and poet; born in Boston, Aug.
15, 1787; died in Brookline, Mass. , Jan. 26,
1800. She was the wife of Charles T. C. Fol-
len, whose memoir she wrote (1842). Her other
works are: “Poems) (1839); (Twilight Stories)
(1858); and (Home Dramas) (1859).
Folz, Hans (fõlts). A German master-
singer; native of Worms; died about 1515, at
Nuremberg, where he followed the trade of
barber-surgeon. He is best known for his
Shrove Tuesday plays; but he wrote also many
jests, New-Year's lays, minstrel songs, etc. ,
highly prized by his contemporaries, but all of
them marred by indelicacy. In better tone are
some of his poems on the events of his time,
as “The Plague) (1482); 'Investiture of the
Emperor Maximilian (1491).
Fontan, Louis Marie (fôn-tän'). A French
dramatist, pamphleteer, and journalist; born
in Lorient, Nov. 4, 1801; died in Thiais, Seine,
Oct. 10, 1839. His newspaper articles and
political pamphlets, particularly 'The Rabid
Sheep' (1829), got him into prison, from which
he was freed by the Revolution of July. His
eminence as a writer for the stage rests upon
(The Reckless Girl Jeanne); (The Monk);
(The Count of St. Germain); and a few others.
He produced also a volume of 'Odes and Epis-
tles) (1825).
Fontana, Ferdinand (fon-ta'nä). An Italian
poet; born in Milan, Jan. 30, 1850. He made
his mark early in journalism, and wrote some
good librettos- (Colomba! (1887); but
his is essentially a poet's fame,-(The Song
of Hate, (Socialism, and “The Meeting' being
effective and beautiful compositions.
Fontane, Theodor (fontä'nė). A German
poet and novelist; born at Neu-Ruppin, Dec. 30,
1819. He visited England several times on lit-
erary quests, particularly of old ballad poetry.
Among his writings are three volumes on Eng.
land, one A Summer in London (1854); (The
Sleswick-Holstein War of 1864' (1866), and
other war histories. His first volume of lyrics,
Men and Heroes,' was published in 1850 ; his
collected (Ballads) in 1892. They are full at
once of fire and of firmly exact phrasing. He
is the author of many masterly stories of North
German life, as (Count Petöfy); Under the
Pear-Tree) (1885); (Mrs. Jenny Treibel (1892).
He is a thorough realist, yet has a kindly, homely
humor.
Fontanes, Marquis Louis de (fôn-tän'). A
French poet and statesman; born at Niort,
March 6, 1757; died March 17, 1821. Pro-
scribed by the Revolution for editing papers
opposed to the Terror, he fed to England,
where he became intimate with Châteaubriand.
Returning when it was safe, he attained high
office under Napoleon and the restored Bour-
bons. He was a brilliant orator and also lit.
erary critic; and wrote several most graceful
descriptive poems - among them (The Forest
of Navarre (1778); (The Carthusian Nun'; and
(All-Souls) (1796), an imitation of Gray's
(Elegy) -- and a translation of Pope's Essay
on Man.
Fontenelle, Bernard le Bovier de (fônt-nel').
A distinguished French essayist; born at Rouen,
13
## p. 194 (#210) ############################################
194
FONVIELLE - FORBES
Feb. II, 1657; died at Paris, Jan. 9, 1757. A
gift of luminous popular exposition made his
historical, philosophical, moral, and scientific
writings highly esteemed. Best known among
his prose writings are: Dialogues of the Dead,
after the Manner of Lucian) (1683); Conver-
sations on the Plurality of Worlds) (1686),
which was translated into many languages and
is still republished; History of the Oracles)
(1686). He was unsuccessful as a writer for
the stage.
Fonvielle, Wilfried de (fôn-vyāl or fôn-
vyā'). A French popular scientific prose-writer;
born in Paris, July 21, 1824. He has long aimed
to propagate scientific truths by his writings, of
which the best known are: (Fossil Man' (1865);
(Balloons in the Siege of Paris) (1871); (The
Physics of Miracles) (1872); (The Conquest of
the North Pole) (1877); (The Wonders of the
Invisible World (5th ed. 1880); and (Thun-
ders and Lightnings) (4th ed. 1885); — besides
one or two minor historical works.
Fonvizin (Von Wisin), Denis Ivanovich
(fon-vis'in). A Russian dramatist, satirist, and
epistolary writer; born in Moscow, April 14,
1745; died in St. Petersburg, Dec. 12, 1792.
His fame as the Molière of his country arises
from the merit of two comedies, (The Briga-
dier) (1766) and (The Minor) (or Mother's
Favorite Son): 1782), ridiculing certain pecul-
iarities of Russian character. A burlesque,
(Court Grammar, and mock (correspond-
ence) of a facetious sort, add to his renown.
Foote, Henry Stewart. An American states-
man and author; born in Fauquier County, Va. ,
Sept. 20, 1800; died in Nashville, Tenn. , May
20, 1880. In 1847 he was chosen to the United
States Senate; resigning in 1852 to serve as
governor of his State. Subsequently he was
elected to the Confederate Congress. His pub-
lications include: (Texas and the Texans)
vols. , 1841); (The War of the Rebellion, or
Scylla and Charybdis) (1866); and (Personal
Reminiscences.
Foote, Mary (Hallock). An American nov-
elist, descriptive writer, and illustrator ; born at
Milton, N. Y. , Nov. 19, 1847; married a mining
engineer, and lives mainly in the Rocky Mount-
ain districts. She is the author of several
novels and collections of short stories on the
life of these regions : (The Led Horse Claim )
(1883); John Bodewin's Testimony) (1886);
(In Exile); (The Chosen Valley); (Coeur d'-
Alène); (The Cup of Trembling and Other
Stories); etc.
Foote, Samuel. An English wag, imperson-
ator, and comic playwright; born at Truro
in Cornwall, 1720; died at Dover, Oct. 21,
1777. From Oxford he went to London to
study law, but had to go on the stage for a
living; tried tragic parts and failed; then
began to give entertainments of a sort now
familiar but then new, impersonating real and
imaginary people and acting little farces by
himself. Later he wrote regular farce-plays, 22
in number; the most notable being "The Mi.
nor) (1700), a skit at the Methodists; (The
Liar); 'The Mayor of Garratt. His repartees
are famous, and have been collected into a
volume. *
Foran, Joseph K. A Canadian poet and
novelist; born in Greenpark, Aylmer, P. Q.
1857. Among his poems the best known are
a Lament for Longfellow) and Indian Trans-
lations. From 1879 till 1883 he published a
series of essays on monuments, coins, art; and
subsequently (Irish-Canadian Representatives:
Their Past Acts, Present Stand, and Future
Prospects); (The Spirit of the Age); also two
novels - (Tom Ellis, a Story of the Northwest
Rebellion,' and (Simon, the Abenakis. )
Forbes, Archibald. A British war corre-
spondent and journalist; born in Morayshire,
Scotland, 1838. He became famous during the
Franco-German war and the Paris communard
insurrection by the vivid power of his letters
to the London Daily News. He also did dis-
tinguished work during the Russo-Turkish war.
His books include: Drawn from Liſe) (1870);
(My Experiences of the War between France
and Germany) (1871); 'Chinese Gordon, a Suc-
cinct Record of his Life) (1884), a very able
work; (Soldiering and Scribbling! ; 'Glimpses
through the Cannon Smoke); Life of Colin
Campbell, Lord Clyde (1895); (Memories and
Studies of War and Peace (1895); Czar and
Sultan); etc.
Forbes, David. An English geologist and
traveler; born at Douglas, Isle of Man, Sept.
6, 1828; died in London, Dec. 5, 1876. As a
civil engineer he traveled all over the world,
studying rock formations and fossils, and writ-
ing On the Relations of the Silurian and
Metamorphic Rocks of the South of Norway)
(1855); (On the Geology of Bolivia and South-
ern Peru) (1861); and kindred treatises.
Forbes, Edward. An eminent English nat-
uralist ; born in Douglas, Isle of Man, Feb. 12,
1815; died in Edinburgh, Nov. 18, 1854. Scarcely
any department of botany, paläontology, geol-
ogy, and the allied sciences, remained without
obligation to his energy and research. The
(History of British Starfishes) (1841), (De-
scription of Fossil Invertebrate from South
India (1846), (Zoology of the European Seas)
(posthumous, 1859), and like studies, remain
monuments of his scientific attainments.
Forbes, Henry 0. A Scotch naturalist; born
in Drumblade, Aberdeen, Jan. 30, 1851. His
learning, supplemented by pilgrimages to Java,
Sumatra, Timor, and New Guinea, has enriched
the literature of science with A Naturalist's
Wanderings in the Eastern Archipelago) (1885);
(Three Months' Exploration in the Tenimbur
Islands of Timor Laut) (1884); and New
Guinea) (1886), which last domain he has most
exhaustively explored.
Forbes, James. An English writer of me-
moirs, and Indian civil servant; born in Lon.
don, 1749; died at Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany,
## p. 195 (#211) ############################################
FORBES - FORNEY
195
23, 1868.
Aug. I, 1819. He lived almost a generation in
the vicinity of Calcutta, where he obtained his
material for the Oriental Memoirs) (1813-15),
a narrative of his experiences and impressions.
Forbes, James David. A noted English
physicist; born in Edinburgh, April 20, 1809;
died in Clifton, Dec. 31, 1868. He investigated
glacial formation, recording his deductions in
(Travels through the Alps of Savoy) (1843);
Illustrations of the Viscous Theory of Glacier
Motion) (1845); Norway and its Glaciers)
(1853); etc. ; in addition to which a (Review
of the Progress of Mathematical and Physical
Science (1858), and Experiments on the Tem-
perature of the Earth' (1846), must be cited.
Force, Manning Ferguson. An American
general in the Civil War; born in Washing.
ton, D. C. , Dec. 17, 1824. He joined the Fed-
eral Army in 1861, and continued in active
service until the close of the war. His public
cations include: (From Fort Henry to Corinth)
(1881); Marching Across Carolina! (1883);
(The Mound Builders); Prehistoric Man);
and (Personal Recollections of the Vicksburg
Campaign) (1885).
Force, Peter. An American historical writer
and journalist; born near Little Falls, N. J. ,
Nov. 26, 1790; died Washington, D. C. , Jan.
His life work, entitled (American
Archives,' a valuable collection of 22,000 books
and 40,000 pamphlets, was bought by the gov-
ernment (1867) and placed in the library of
Congress. He has published also (Grinnell
Land : Remarks on the English Maps of Arctic
Discoveries in 1850-1) (1852); and Notes on
Lord Mahon's History of the American Dec-
laration of Independence) (1855).
Forcellini, Egidio (for-chel-e'nē). A notable
Italian lexicographer; born in Feltre, Belluno,
Aug. 26, 1688; died Padua, April 4, 1768.
Notwithstanding a humble origin and impov-
erished circumstances, he acquired scholarly
distinction early in life, and consecrated his
best years and efforts to a Dictionary of all
Latinity) (1771), published posthumously; and
so thoroughly well done that every subsequent
work of the kind has been indebted to it.
The success of the volumes was largely due
to the guidance and support of Facciolati, his
collaborator.
Forchhammer, Peter Wilhelm (forch'häm-
mer). A German classical schola and anti-
quarian; born in Husum, Oct. 23, 1801; died in
Kiel, Jan. 9, 1894. Topography and mythology
were his special fields; and in (Hellenica)
(
(1837); (The Topography of Athens) (1841);
Description of the Plain of Troy) (1850); and
works on the interpretation of myth, he places
scholars under great obligations.
Ford, James Lauren. An American jour-
nalist and author; born in Missouri in 1854.
He has written several volumes of short stories
and essays, among which are: Hypnotic Tales'
(1891); (The Literary Shop) (1894); (Bohemi
Invaded); Dolly Dillenback. He is also the
author of two books for young readers : (Dr.
Dodd's School (1892) and (The Third Alarm
(1893).
Ford, John. An English dramatist; born at
Islington in Devon, April 1586; died about 1640.
He turned from law to devote himself to the
drama. His first poem was "Fame's Memorial,"
an elegy on the Earl of Devonshire. Alone
and in collaboration he wrote a series of very
successful plays. His tragedies sometimes go
beyond even the elastic Elizabethan limits of
the permissible, and are Greek in repulsive.
ness of theme; his comedies are sometimes
distasteful: but as a poet he ranks among the
foremost outside of Shakespeare. Among his
best plays are: “The Lover's Melancholy);
(The Broken Heart); Love's Sacrifice. *
Ford, Paul Leicester. An American bibli.
ographer and novelist ; born in Brooklyn, N. Y. ,
in 1865. Besides numerous pamphlets relating
to American historiography his works include:
(The Honorable Peter Stirling) (1894), a novel
of New York society ; (The True George
Washington' (1896); Bibliotheca Hamiltonia';
(Franklin Bibliography); and an edition of the
works of Thomas Jefferson (1897), with notes,
biographical introduction, etc. He has recently
published (The Story of an Untold Love. )
Ford, Sallie Rochester. An American story-
writer; born in Rochester Springs, Boyle County,
Ky. , in 1828. Together with her husband she
edited the Christian Repository and the Home
Circle for many years. Among her published
works are : 'Grace Truman (1857); (Mary Bun-
yan' (1859); (Morgan and his Men) (1864); and
(Ernest Quest' (1887).
Fornaris, José (for-nä'rēs). A Cuban poet;
born in Bayamo, Cuba, 1826. He wrote the
dramas (The Daughter of the People) and
(Love and Sacrifice); and is author of
(The Harp of the Home, (Songs of the
Tropics,' and other volumes of verse.
Forneron, Henri (for-nº-rốn”). A French
historian and biographer; born in Troyes, Nov.
16, 1834; died in Paris, March 26, 1886. He
was connected with the ministry of finance, but
preferred historical and biographical studies,
the results of which were highly profitable and
entertaining, particularly his (Amours of Car-
dinal Richelieu) (1870); "History of the Polit.
ical Debates in the English Parliament since
the Revolution of 1688) (1871); "The Dukes of
Guise and their Time) (1877); and History
of Philip II. (1880-82).
Forney, John Weiss. An American poli-
tician, journalist, and author; born in Lancas-
ter, Pa. , Sept. 30, 1817; died in Philadelphia,
Pa. , Dec. 9, 1881. He was apprenticed in the
office of the Lancaster Journal in 1833; was
clerk of the House of Representatives from
1851 to 1855; and secretary of the United States
Senate from 1861 to 1868. He was connected
with several papers in Philadelphia and Wash-
ington. Among his works are: “What I Saw
in Texas) (1872); (Anecdotes of Public Men'
## p. 196 (#212) ############################################
196
FORSTER - FORTUNATUS
a
(1873); Forty Years of American Journalism)
(1877).
Förster, Ernst (fér'ster). A German artist,
art writer, and critic; born in Münchengosser-
städt on the Saale, April 8, 1800; died in Munich,
April 29, 1885. His capacity with pencil and
brush speedily made him known; and in (The
Truth about Jean Paul's Life) (1827-33), (His-
tory of German Art) (1851-60), History of
Italian Art) (1869-78), and numerous kindred
studies, he showed his literary skill. His essays
on the works of the old masters are invaluable
to tourist and student.
Förster, Friedrich Christoph. A Ger-
man historian, poet, essayist, and critic; born
in Münchengosserstädt on the Saale, Sept. 24,
1791; died in Berlin, Nov. 8, 1868. He fought
in the war of liberation, and with a Battle-
Cry to the Aroused Germans) won fame as a
song-writer: but « The Courts and Cabinets of
Europe in the Eighteenth Century) (1836–39);
(Gustavus Adolphus) (1832), a historical drama;
(Prussian Heroes in War and Peace, a history
in detached studies; Poems) (1838), a verse
collection; and many short fictions, comprise
his enduring works.
Forster, Georg (fôrs'ter). A German tour-
ist and writer of travel, son of Johann Rein-
hold ; born 1754; died 1794. He wrote (Views
on the Lower Rhine, and Minor Writings on
philosophy.
Forster, Johann Reinhold. A German nat-
uralist and voyager; born in Dirschau, West
Prussia, Oct. 22, 1729; died in Halle, Dec. 9,
1798. An inveterate student and investigator,
he was master of seventeen languages, besides
his accomplishments in the physical sciences,
theology, and metaphysics. His specialties are
indicated by the titles of his brilliant and
famous works: Introduction to Mineralogy)
(1768); (Flora of South America' (1771); (De.
scription of the Kinds and Qualities of Plants
Gathered during a Journey to the Islands of
the South Sea, 1772–75' (1776); (Observations
Made during a Voyage Round the World
(1778); and many more.
Forster, John. An English biographer and
historical writer ; born in Newcastle-on-Tyne,
April 2, 1812; died in London, Feb. 2, 1876.
He was educated for the law; held one or two
public offices, and finally engaged in literature
and journalism. He is noted for his (Life of
Charles Dickens) (1871-74). He also wrote:
(Statesmen of the Commonwealth of England)
(1831-34); (Life of Oliver Goldsmith) (1848);
Biographical and Historical Essays' (1859); etc.
Förster, Karl August (férs'ter). A German
poet and translator of poetry; born in Naum-
burg on the Saale, April 3, 1784; died in Dres-
den, Dec. 18, 1841. His versions of Petrarch,
of Tasso's choicer lyric verse, and of Dante's
New Life) (1841), won admiration. He wrote
a work on “Raphael (1827), and has pub-
lished a volume of Poems) (1842).
Forsyth, Joseph. A Scotch descriptive writer;
born in Elgin, Feb. 18, 1763; died there, Sept.
20, 1815. He was a man of taste and training
who gratified a life's ambition by visiting Italy,
where he observed and studied much; aſter-
wards writing Remarks on Antiquities, Arts,
and Letters, during an Excursion in Italy in
the Years 1802 and 1803' (1813), a work of such
merit that it has run through many editions.
Forsyth, William.
and other prose writings. His best work is
(Venice, the City of the Sea) (2 vols. , 1853).
He contributed to the New World Magazine
seven historical romances, based on the dramas
of Victor Hugo. Edmond Dantès,' a sequel
to (Monte Cristo,' was written by him, as also
were Mary Tudor) and other dramas.
Flagg, Wilson. An American naturalist,
scientific and political writer; born in Beverly,
Mass. , Nov. 5, 1805; died in North Cambridge,
Mass. , May 6, 1884. Some of his books are:
"Studies in the field and Forest) (1857); (Hal-
cyon Days); A Year among the Trees) (1881);
and A Year among the Birds. ?
Flammarion, Camille ( Ha-ma-re-ôn”). A
French astronomer, writer on descriptive as-
tronomy, and (astronomical novelist); born
in Montigny-le-Roi, Feb. 25, 1842. He was
designed by his parents for the Church, but
went over to science, and by a long course of
writings of a more or less popular character
has made his name widely known. ( The Plural-
ity of Inhabited Worlds) (1862); (Celestial
Wonders) (1865); (The Atmosphere) (1872);
(Urania) ( 1889 ); and “The Planet Mars and
its Habitability) (1892), are his best-known
works, not to mention an experiment or two
in romance of the astronomical creation. "
Flash, Henry Lynden. An American writer
of verse; born in Cincinnati, O. , Jan. 20, 1835.
He is the author of Poems) (1860), and of
many popular ballads which appeared during
the Civil War.
Flassan, Gaétan Raxis, Count de (fläs-än').
A French diplomatist and historian of diplo-
macy; born at Bedouin, Venaissin, 1770; died
in Paris, March 20, 1845. His career in the
diplomatic service was fairly distinguished,
enabling him to gather material for a valu-
able History of French Diplomacy from the
Foundation of the Monarchy to Aug. 10, 1792)
(1808-11), and one or two works of less im-
portance.
Flaubert, Gustav (fő-bãr'). A distinguished
French novelist; born at Rouen, Dec. 12, 1821 ;
died there, May 8, 1880. His greatest novel
was his first, Madame Bovary) (1857). He
next wrote a historical novel, “Salammbộ, the
scene laid in the most fourishing period of
Carthage,-a splendid description of ancient
Punic life, but having lively interest as a story;
(The History of a Young Man (1869), like
Madame Bovary) a pessimistic picture of so-
cial life; (The Temptation of St. Anthony)
(1874), a piece of imaginative writing dealing
with philosophical problems; and (Three Sto-
ries) (1877), which had a favorable reception.
The posthumous novel ( Bouvard and Pécuchet)
(1881) is a satire on humanity in general. His
comedy (The Candidate) (1874) failed on the
stage. *
Fléchier, Esprit (fā-shyā'). A notable
French pulpit orator and writer; born at
Pernes, in the Venaissin, June 10, 1632 ; died at
Montpellier, Feb. 16, 1710. His funeral orations,
especially those on Montausier and Turenne,
are models of elegiac oratory. He wrote a
(History of Theodosius the Great' (1679);
(Panegyrics of aints ) (1690); History of
Cardinal Ximenes) (1693).
Fleming, George. See Fletcher, Julia.
Fleming, Mrs. May Agnes (Early). A
Canadian story-writer; born in New Brunswick,
1840; died 1880. She was a prolific author of
romances, mostly sersational, among them be-
ing: Guy Earlscourt's Wife); Lost for a
Woman); (Pride and Passion); etc.
Fleming, Paul (flem'ing). A distinguished
German poet; born at Hartenstein in Saxony,
Oct. 5, 1609; died at Hamburg, April 2, 1640.
As an attaché of an embassy to Russia and Per-
sia, he had an opportunity (1635-39) of studying
many peoples. His "German Poems, which
appeared in 1642, were often republished. His
poetry is a true reflection of his inmost thought :
he is seen to be a man of unsophisticated tastes,
of childlike piety, and yet of virile sense and
passion. *
Fletcher, Giles. An English clergyman and
poet, cousin to John; born in London about
1580; died at Aldertoni in 1623. His only
notable composition was a sacred poem en-
titled (Christ's Victorie and Triumph in Heaven
and Earth over and after Death (1610), rich
in imagery and descriptions of natural scenery.
Parts of it were utilized by Milton in his
Paradise Regained. '
Fletcher, John. An English dramatist; born
in Rye, Sussex, in December 1579; died in Lon-
don during the plague, in August 1625. His
partnership with Beaumont is called by Swin-
burne “the most perfect union in genius and
friendship. ” (The Woman Hater,' published
anonymously in 1607 and usually accorded to
Fletcher, Swinburne and Bullen assign to Beau-
mont. Fletcher survived his friend nine years,
during which he produced many plays with and
without collaborators; the latter include Mas-
singer, Middleton, Rowley, Shirley, and others.
It is certain that he wrote alone (The Faithful
Shepherdess, Bonduca, Valentinian, (The
Wild Goose Chase, and Monsieur Thomas,
his greatest works; Rule a Wife and Have a
Wife); (The Loyal Subject); (Wit Without
Money); A Wife for a Month); (The Chances);
(The Mad Lover); and (The Humorous Lieu-
tenant. Bullen, the most authoritative critic
of Elizabethan literature, says he had Massin-
ger's aid in “The Knight of Malta,' (Thierry
and Theodoret, (The Little French Lawyer,'
(The Beggar's Bush,' (The Spanish Curate,
(The False One,' and (A Very Woman. The
same authority gives (The Queen of Corinth)
with Massinger, Rowley, and Middleton ; (The
Jeweller of Amsterdam) with Massinger and
Field ; (The Bloody Brother) with Ben Jonson,
revised by Middleton ; (Two Noble Kinsmen)
with Massinger, after Shakespeare's death; and
considers (Henry VIII. the work of Fletcher
a
## p. 192 (#208) ############################################
192
FLETCHER-FOGAZZARO
and Massinger with Shakespearean passages.
* (See Beaumont and Fletcher. ')
Fletcher, Julia Constance. (“George Flem-
ing. ”] An American novelist; born in Rio
Janeiro, Brazil, about 1850; daughter of James
C. Fletcher, who was a missionary to Brazil
and wrote (Brazil and the Brazilians. Among
her novels are : Kismet) (1877); “The Head
of the Medusa (1880); (Andromeda) (1885);
(The Truth about Clement Ker' (1889); and
(For Plain Women Only. '
Fleury, Claude (flė-re'). A French Church
historian and pedagogue; born in Paris, Dec.
6, 1640; died there (? ), July 14, 1723. His
learning and unaffected simplicity made him
a notable figure at the court of Louis XIV. , and
later at that of Louis XV. , whose confessor he
became. An Ecclesiastical History' (1691-
1720) forms his claim to enduring renown;
the work coming down to 1414, at which point
a later writer has attempted, although not sym-
pathetically, to round out the master's perform-
ance. A History of French Law) (1674) and
a Historical Catechism' (1679) are less im-
portant achievements.
Fleury-Husson, Jules. See Champfleury.
Flint, Timothy. An American clergyman
and miscellaneous writer; born in North Read-
ing, Mass. , July 11, 1780; died in Salem, Mass. ,
Aug. 16, 1840. He was a Congregational min-
ister during 1812-14; subsequently he devoted
himself to editorial work, descriptive writing,
and fiction. In these departments his most
important work is included in: (The Geogra-
phy and History of the Mississippi Valley);
(Indian Wars in the West); and in fiction,
Francis Berrian); “George Mason); and “The
Shoshone Valley. )
Floquet, Pierre Amable (fő-kā'). A French
historian and biographical writer; born in
Rouen, July 9, 1797; died in Formentin, Aug. 6,
1881. He made Normandy's annals and per-
sonages the objects of his painstaking study
in Norman Anecdotes); History of the Par-
liament of Normandy) (1840-43); (Studies in
the Life of Bossuet! (1855); of which the last
two were crowned by the Academy. Subse-
quent volumes show the rich harvest the field
has yielded him.
Florez, Henrique (fõ'reth). A Spanish his-
torian and antiquarian; born in Valladolid,
Feb. 14, 1701; died in Madrid, Aug. 20, 1773.
He was an Augustinian ordinary who taught
theology and history with brilliant success,
and charmed his classes by presenting dogmas
and annals from the standpoint of their human
interest. “Sacred Spain) (1747-73), on the his-
tory and dominion of the Church in the penin-
sula, brought down to the present time by a
recent writer; “Memorials of Catholic Queens);
and other works of importance, justify the high
opinion entertained of him.
Florian, Jean Pierre Claris de (fő-ryon').
A French poet and romancer (1755-94). At
10 he captivated Voltaire by his quick repartee
and sprightliness. He made his debut with
some pleasing farces (1779), and added greatly
to his fame with the two pastoral stories (Gala-
tea' (1783) and Estelle (1787); but both are
sentimental romances in the dominant taste of
that time. A like judgment is to be passed on
his metrical romances Numa Pompilius) (1786)
and (Gonsalvo of Cordova) (1791). He also
wrote (Medleys of Poetry and Literature); and
(Florian's Youth,' in which he recounts the
story of his boyhood. *
Flourens, Marie Jean Pierre (flö-ron'). An
eminent French writer on physiology and anat-
omy; born in Maurilhan, Hérault, April 15,
1794; died at Montgeron, near Paris, Dec. 5,
1867. His special studies were neurology, oste-
ology, and cellular pathology. The following
partial list of his writings indicates his wide
scope and massive knowledge: Physical Re-
searches into Irritability and Sensibility) (1822);
(General Anatomy of the Skin and of its Mu-
cous Membranes) (1843); Life and Intelli-
gence) (1857); Natural Ontology) (1864); and
works in which he traces with admirable lucid-
ity the connection between the respective as-
pects of physical, intellectual, and ethical states.
Flower, Benjamin Orange. An American
editor and author; born in Illinois in 1859.
He was until recently the publisher and editor
of the Arena, Boston, Mass. Among his nu-
merous works are: (Civilization's Inferno; or
Studies in the Social Cellar (1893); (The New
Time) (1894); Persons, Places, and Ideas);
"Gerald Massey: Poet, Prophet, and Mystic)
(1895). He is now editor of The New Time.
Flower, Frank Abial. An American histor-
ical writer; born in Cottage, N. Y. , May 11, 1854.
Has written several local histories. Among
his works are to be found : (Old Abe, the Wis-
consin War Eagle) (1880); (The Life of Mat-
thew H. Carpenter) (1883); and a (History of
the Republican Party) (1884). He is curator
of the Wisconsin Historical Society.
Flügel, Johann Gottfried (flü'gel). A Ger-
man lexicographer and compiler of language
manuals; born in Barby on the Elbe, Nov. 22,
1788; died in Leipsic, June 24, 1855. He spent
many years in this country in business, diplo-
matic, and official occupations, and compiled
(with J. Sporschil) a (Complete English-Ger-
man and German-English Dictionary) (1830),
besides publishing A Series of Commercial
Letters) (9th ed. 1874); Practical Handbook
of English Business Correspondence) (9th ed.
1873); (Triglot; or Mercantile Dictionary in
Three Tongues — German, English, French)
(2d ed. 1854); and other useful manuals, all
revised, or brought down to contemporary
needs, by his son.
Flygare-Carlén. See Carlén.
Fogazzaro, Antonio (fő-gäts-är'o). An Ital.
ian poet and story-teller; born at Vicenza, 1842.
He first came into notice with Miranda, a
story in verse (1874), and added greatly to his
reputation as a poet with Valsonda,' a volume
## p. 193 (#209) ############################################
FOGLAR - FONTENELLE
193
-e. 8
of lyrics (1876). He is author of several novels
which were received with marked favor, among
them (Master Chicco's Fiasco) (1885); Daniel
Cortis) (1887); (The Poet's Mystery) (1888).
Foglar, Ludwig (fõ'glär). An Austrian poet;
born in Vienna, Dec. 24, 1819; died at Kam-
mer, Aug. 15, 1889. Among his poems, mostly
lyric, are (Cypresses) (1842); “Sunbeams and
Shadows) (1846); (Clara von Vissegrad) an
epic (1847); (Freedom's Breviary) (1848); Joy.
ful and Sorrowful' (1867); (Saint Velocipede)
(1869), a satire (under the pseudonym Leb-
erecht Flott”).
Fokke Simonsz, Arend (fok'é). A Dutch
essayist; born at Amsterdam, July 2, 1755; died
there, Nov. 15, 1812. All his writings, especially
his (Catechism of Arts and Sciences) (11 vols. ,
1785-1804), give proof of the extraordinary
compass of his learning; but he is most cele-
brated for his popular scientific works, mostly
written in a burlesque or a satiric vein. From
him we have the delightful literary satires (The
Modern Helicon (1792) and (Apollo, Sergeant
of the Burghers' Guard); Life of Lucifer)
(1799), a history of demonology in form of a
comic romance; the psychological disquisition
(The Different Aspects of Human Life) (1786);
(Woman Is Boss) (1807).
Folengo, Teofilo (fő-len'go). [Pseudonym
"Merlino Coccajo. ”] An Italian poet (1491-
1554). He was the first to win fame as a writer
of macaronic verses. His Macaronic Work of
Merlino Coccajo, Mantuan Poet) – first pub-
lished in 17 cantos (1517), and four years later
in 25-comprises the comico-heroic poems
(Baldus) and (Moscæa) (War of the Midges).
His satire is mostly against monachism. He
writes in cynic humor, but under his burlesque
lies a vein of serious purpose : to him Rabelais
owes not a little. Under the pseudonym “Li-
merno Pitocco” he wrote in Italian the epic sat-
ire (Orlandino) (1526) in ridicule of the story
of Roland; then, partly in macaronic, partly in
pure Italian, partly in pure Latin, «The Chaos
of Three by One) (1527), in which he darkly
recounts the events of his own life. He wrote
them while a vagrant from his monastery; he
returned later and composed some religious
poems of little value.
Follen, August (föl'len). A German poet
of patriotism, and popular song writer; born
in Giessen, Jan. 21, 1794; died in Bern, Dec.
26, 1855. He was a little of a soldier, a little
of a lawyer, and a good deal of an enthusiast,
suffering imprisonment for alleged demagogy.
He became intensely popular as the author of
(Sons of Fatherland,' a patriotic hymn; (Ma-
legys and Vivian' (1829), a romance of chivalry ;
and numerous fine translations and poetic ap-
peals to the instinct for liberty.
Follen, Eliza Lee (Cabot). An American
prose-writer and poet; born in Boston, Aug.
15, 1787; died in Brookline, Mass. , Jan. 26,
1800. She was the wife of Charles T. C. Fol-
len, whose memoir she wrote (1842). Her other
works are: “Poems) (1839); (Twilight Stories)
(1858); and (Home Dramas) (1859).
Folz, Hans (fõlts). A German master-
singer; native of Worms; died about 1515, at
Nuremberg, where he followed the trade of
barber-surgeon. He is best known for his
Shrove Tuesday plays; but he wrote also many
jests, New-Year's lays, minstrel songs, etc. ,
highly prized by his contemporaries, but all of
them marred by indelicacy. In better tone are
some of his poems on the events of his time,
as “The Plague) (1482); 'Investiture of the
Emperor Maximilian (1491).
Fontan, Louis Marie (fôn-tän'). A French
dramatist, pamphleteer, and journalist; born
in Lorient, Nov. 4, 1801; died in Thiais, Seine,
Oct. 10, 1839. His newspaper articles and
political pamphlets, particularly 'The Rabid
Sheep' (1829), got him into prison, from which
he was freed by the Revolution of July. His
eminence as a writer for the stage rests upon
(The Reckless Girl Jeanne); (The Monk);
(The Count of St. Germain); and a few others.
He produced also a volume of 'Odes and Epis-
tles) (1825).
Fontana, Ferdinand (fon-ta'nä). An Italian
poet; born in Milan, Jan. 30, 1850. He made
his mark early in journalism, and wrote some
good librettos- (Colomba! (1887); but
his is essentially a poet's fame,-(The Song
of Hate, (Socialism, and “The Meeting' being
effective and beautiful compositions.
Fontane, Theodor (fontä'nė). A German
poet and novelist; born at Neu-Ruppin, Dec. 30,
1819. He visited England several times on lit-
erary quests, particularly of old ballad poetry.
Among his writings are three volumes on Eng.
land, one A Summer in London (1854); (The
Sleswick-Holstein War of 1864' (1866), and
other war histories. His first volume of lyrics,
Men and Heroes,' was published in 1850 ; his
collected (Ballads) in 1892. They are full at
once of fire and of firmly exact phrasing. He
is the author of many masterly stories of North
German life, as (Count Petöfy); Under the
Pear-Tree) (1885); (Mrs. Jenny Treibel (1892).
He is a thorough realist, yet has a kindly, homely
humor.
Fontanes, Marquis Louis de (fôn-tän'). A
French poet and statesman; born at Niort,
March 6, 1757; died March 17, 1821. Pro-
scribed by the Revolution for editing papers
opposed to the Terror, he fed to England,
where he became intimate with Châteaubriand.
Returning when it was safe, he attained high
office under Napoleon and the restored Bour-
bons. He was a brilliant orator and also lit.
erary critic; and wrote several most graceful
descriptive poems - among them (The Forest
of Navarre (1778); (The Carthusian Nun'; and
(All-Souls) (1796), an imitation of Gray's
(Elegy) -- and a translation of Pope's Essay
on Man.
Fontenelle, Bernard le Bovier de (fônt-nel').
A distinguished French essayist; born at Rouen,
13
## p. 194 (#210) ############################################
194
FONVIELLE - FORBES
Feb. II, 1657; died at Paris, Jan. 9, 1757. A
gift of luminous popular exposition made his
historical, philosophical, moral, and scientific
writings highly esteemed. Best known among
his prose writings are: Dialogues of the Dead,
after the Manner of Lucian) (1683); Conver-
sations on the Plurality of Worlds) (1686),
which was translated into many languages and
is still republished; History of the Oracles)
(1686). He was unsuccessful as a writer for
the stage.
Fonvielle, Wilfried de (fôn-vyāl or fôn-
vyā'). A French popular scientific prose-writer;
born in Paris, July 21, 1824. He has long aimed
to propagate scientific truths by his writings, of
which the best known are: (Fossil Man' (1865);
(Balloons in the Siege of Paris) (1871); (The
Physics of Miracles) (1872); (The Conquest of
the North Pole) (1877); (The Wonders of the
Invisible World (5th ed. 1880); and (Thun-
ders and Lightnings) (4th ed. 1885); — besides
one or two minor historical works.
Fonvizin (Von Wisin), Denis Ivanovich
(fon-vis'in). A Russian dramatist, satirist, and
epistolary writer; born in Moscow, April 14,
1745; died in St. Petersburg, Dec. 12, 1792.
His fame as the Molière of his country arises
from the merit of two comedies, (The Briga-
dier) (1766) and (The Minor) (or Mother's
Favorite Son): 1782), ridiculing certain pecul-
iarities of Russian character. A burlesque,
(Court Grammar, and mock (correspond-
ence) of a facetious sort, add to his renown.
Foote, Henry Stewart. An American states-
man and author; born in Fauquier County, Va. ,
Sept. 20, 1800; died in Nashville, Tenn. , May
20, 1880. In 1847 he was chosen to the United
States Senate; resigning in 1852 to serve as
governor of his State. Subsequently he was
elected to the Confederate Congress. His pub-
lications include: (Texas and the Texans)
vols. , 1841); (The War of the Rebellion, or
Scylla and Charybdis) (1866); and (Personal
Reminiscences.
Foote, Mary (Hallock). An American nov-
elist, descriptive writer, and illustrator ; born at
Milton, N. Y. , Nov. 19, 1847; married a mining
engineer, and lives mainly in the Rocky Mount-
ain districts. She is the author of several
novels and collections of short stories on the
life of these regions : (The Led Horse Claim )
(1883); John Bodewin's Testimony) (1886);
(In Exile); (The Chosen Valley); (Coeur d'-
Alène); (The Cup of Trembling and Other
Stories); etc.
Foote, Samuel. An English wag, imperson-
ator, and comic playwright; born at Truro
in Cornwall, 1720; died at Dover, Oct. 21,
1777. From Oxford he went to London to
study law, but had to go on the stage for a
living; tried tragic parts and failed; then
began to give entertainments of a sort now
familiar but then new, impersonating real and
imaginary people and acting little farces by
himself. Later he wrote regular farce-plays, 22
in number; the most notable being "The Mi.
nor) (1700), a skit at the Methodists; (The
Liar); 'The Mayor of Garratt. His repartees
are famous, and have been collected into a
volume. *
Foran, Joseph K. A Canadian poet and
novelist; born in Greenpark, Aylmer, P. Q.
1857. Among his poems the best known are
a Lament for Longfellow) and Indian Trans-
lations. From 1879 till 1883 he published a
series of essays on monuments, coins, art; and
subsequently (Irish-Canadian Representatives:
Their Past Acts, Present Stand, and Future
Prospects); (The Spirit of the Age); also two
novels - (Tom Ellis, a Story of the Northwest
Rebellion,' and (Simon, the Abenakis. )
Forbes, Archibald. A British war corre-
spondent and journalist; born in Morayshire,
Scotland, 1838. He became famous during the
Franco-German war and the Paris communard
insurrection by the vivid power of his letters
to the London Daily News. He also did dis-
tinguished work during the Russo-Turkish war.
His books include: Drawn from Liſe) (1870);
(My Experiences of the War between France
and Germany) (1871); 'Chinese Gordon, a Suc-
cinct Record of his Life) (1884), a very able
work; (Soldiering and Scribbling! ; 'Glimpses
through the Cannon Smoke); Life of Colin
Campbell, Lord Clyde (1895); (Memories and
Studies of War and Peace (1895); Czar and
Sultan); etc.
Forbes, David. An English geologist and
traveler; born at Douglas, Isle of Man, Sept.
6, 1828; died in London, Dec. 5, 1876. As a
civil engineer he traveled all over the world,
studying rock formations and fossils, and writ-
ing On the Relations of the Silurian and
Metamorphic Rocks of the South of Norway)
(1855); (On the Geology of Bolivia and South-
ern Peru) (1861); and kindred treatises.
Forbes, Edward. An eminent English nat-
uralist ; born in Douglas, Isle of Man, Feb. 12,
1815; died in Edinburgh, Nov. 18, 1854. Scarcely
any department of botany, paläontology, geol-
ogy, and the allied sciences, remained without
obligation to his energy and research. The
(History of British Starfishes) (1841), (De-
scription of Fossil Invertebrate from South
India (1846), (Zoology of the European Seas)
(posthumous, 1859), and like studies, remain
monuments of his scientific attainments.
Forbes, Henry 0. A Scotch naturalist; born
in Drumblade, Aberdeen, Jan. 30, 1851. His
learning, supplemented by pilgrimages to Java,
Sumatra, Timor, and New Guinea, has enriched
the literature of science with A Naturalist's
Wanderings in the Eastern Archipelago) (1885);
(Three Months' Exploration in the Tenimbur
Islands of Timor Laut) (1884); and New
Guinea) (1886), which last domain he has most
exhaustively explored.
Forbes, James. An English writer of me-
moirs, and Indian civil servant; born in Lon.
don, 1749; died at Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany,
## p. 195 (#211) ############################################
FORBES - FORNEY
195
23, 1868.
Aug. I, 1819. He lived almost a generation in
the vicinity of Calcutta, where he obtained his
material for the Oriental Memoirs) (1813-15),
a narrative of his experiences and impressions.
Forbes, James David. A noted English
physicist; born in Edinburgh, April 20, 1809;
died in Clifton, Dec. 31, 1868. He investigated
glacial formation, recording his deductions in
(Travels through the Alps of Savoy) (1843);
Illustrations of the Viscous Theory of Glacier
Motion) (1845); Norway and its Glaciers)
(1853); etc. ; in addition to which a (Review
of the Progress of Mathematical and Physical
Science (1858), and Experiments on the Tem-
perature of the Earth' (1846), must be cited.
Force, Manning Ferguson. An American
general in the Civil War; born in Washing.
ton, D. C. , Dec. 17, 1824. He joined the Fed-
eral Army in 1861, and continued in active
service until the close of the war. His public
cations include: (From Fort Henry to Corinth)
(1881); Marching Across Carolina! (1883);
(The Mound Builders); Prehistoric Man);
and (Personal Recollections of the Vicksburg
Campaign) (1885).
Force, Peter. An American historical writer
and journalist; born near Little Falls, N. J. ,
Nov. 26, 1790; died Washington, D. C. , Jan.
His life work, entitled (American
Archives,' a valuable collection of 22,000 books
and 40,000 pamphlets, was bought by the gov-
ernment (1867) and placed in the library of
Congress. He has published also (Grinnell
Land : Remarks on the English Maps of Arctic
Discoveries in 1850-1) (1852); and Notes on
Lord Mahon's History of the American Dec-
laration of Independence) (1855).
Forcellini, Egidio (for-chel-e'nē). A notable
Italian lexicographer; born in Feltre, Belluno,
Aug. 26, 1688; died Padua, April 4, 1768.
Notwithstanding a humble origin and impov-
erished circumstances, he acquired scholarly
distinction early in life, and consecrated his
best years and efforts to a Dictionary of all
Latinity) (1771), published posthumously; and
so thoroughly well done that every subsequent
work of the kind has been indebted to it.
The success of the volumes was largely due
to the guidance and support of Facciolati, his
collaborator.
Forchhammer, Peter Wilhelm (forch'häm-
mer). A German classical schola and anti-
quarian; born in Husum, Oct. 23, 1801; died in
Kiel, Jan. 9, 1894. Topography and mythology
were his special fields; and in (Hellenica)
(
(1837); (The Topography of Athens) (1841);
Description of the Plain of Troy) (1850); and
works on the interpretation of myth, he places
scholars under great obligations.
Ford, James Lauren. An American jour-
nalist and author; born in Missouri in 1854.
He has written several volumes of short stories
and essays, among which are: Hypnotic Tales'
(1891); (The Literary Shop) (1894); (Bohemi
Invaded); Dolly Dillenback. He is also the
author of two books for young readers : (Dr.
Dodd's School (1892) and (The Third Alarm
(1893).
Ford, John. An English dramatist; born at
Islington in Devon, April 1586; died about 1640.
He turned from law to devote himself to the
drama. His first poem was "Fame's Memorial,"
an elegy on the Earl of Devonshire. Alone
and in collaboration he wrote a series of very
successful plays. His tragedies sometimes go
beyond even the elastic Elizabethan limits of
the permissible, and are Greek in repulsive.
ness of theme; his comedies are sometimes
distasteful: but as a poet he ranks among the
foremost outside of Shakespeare. Among his
best plays are: “The Lover's Melancholy);
(The Broken Heart); Love's Sacrifice. *
Ford, Paul Leicester. An American bibli.
ographer and novelist ; born in Brooklyn, N. Y. ,
in 1865. Besides numerous pamphlets relating
to American historiography his works include:
(The Honorable Peter Stirling) (1894), a novel
of New York society ; (The True George
Washington' (1896); Bibliotheca Hamiltonia';
(Franklin Bibliography); and an edition of the
works of Thomas Jefferson (1897), with notes,
biographical introduction, etc. He has recently
published (The Story of an Untold Love. )
Ford, Sallie Rochester. An American story-
writer; born in Rochester Springs, Boyle County,
Ky. , in 1828. Together with her husband she
edited the Christian Repository and the Home
Circle for many years. Among her published
works are : 'Grace Truman (1857); (Mary Bun-
yan' (1859); (Morgan and his Men) (1864); and
(Ernest Quest' (1887).
Fornaris, José (for-nä'rēs). A Cuban poet;
born in Bayamo, Cuba, 1826. He wrote the
dramas (The Daughter of the People) and
(Love and Sacrifice); and is author of
(The Harp of the Home, (Songs of the
Tropics,' and other volumes of verse.
Forneron, Henri (for-nº-rốn”). A French
historian and biographer; born in Troyes, Nov.
16, 1834; died in Paris, March 26, 1886. He
was connected with the ministry of finance, but
preferred historical and biographical studies,
the results of which were highly profitable and
entertaining, particularly his (Amours of Car-
dinal Richelieu) (1870); "History of the Polit.
ical Debates in the English Parliament since
the Revolution of 1688) (1871); "The Dukes of
Guise and their Time) (1877); and History
of Philip II. (1880-82).
Forney, John Weiss. An American poli-
tician, journalist, and author; born in Lancas-
ter, Pa. , Sept. 30, 1817; died in Philadelphia,
Pa. , Dec. 9, 1881. He was apprenticed in the
office of the Lancaster Journal in 1833; was
clerk of the House of Representatives from
1851 to 1855; and secretary of the United States
Senate from 1861 to 1868. He was connected
with several papers in Philadelphia and Wash-
ington. Among his works are: “What I Saw
in Texas) (1872); (Anecdotes of Public Men'
## p. 196 (#212) ############################################
196
FORSTER - FORTUNATUS
a
(1873); Forty Years of American Journalism)
(1877).
Förster, Ernst (fér'ster). A German artist,
art writer, and critic; born in Münchengosser-
städt on the Saale, April 8, 1800; died in Munich,
April 29, 1885. His capacity with pencil and
brush speedily made him known; and in (The
Truth about Jean Paul's Life) (1827-33), (His-
tory of German Art) (1851-60), History of
Italian Art) (1869-78), and numerous kindred
studies, he showed his literary skill. His essays
on the works of the old masters are invaluable
to tourist and student.
Förster, Friedrich Christoph. A Ger-
man historian, poet, essayist, and critic; born
in Münchengosserstädt on the Saale, Sept. 24,
1791; died in Berlin, Nov. 8, 1868. He fought
in the war of liberation, and with a Battle-
Cry to the Aroused Germans) won fame as a
song-writer: but « The Courts and Cabinets of
Europe in the Eighteenth Century) (1836–39);
(Gustavus Adolphus) (1832), a historical drama;
(Prussian Heroes in War and Peace, a history
in detached studies; Poems) (1838), a verse
collection; and many short fictions, comprise
his enduring works.
Forster, Georg (fôrs'ter). A German tour-
ist and writer of travel, son of Johann Rein-
hold ; born 1754; died 1794. He wrote (Views
on the Lower Rhine, and Minor Writings on
philosophy.
Forster, Johann Reinhold. A German nat-
uralist and voyager; born in Dirschau, West
Prussia, Oct. 22, 1729; died in Halle, Dec. 9,
1798. An inveterate student and investigator,
he was master of seventeen languages, besides
his accomplishments in the physical sciences,
theology, and metaphysics. His specialties are
indicated by the titles of his brilliant and
famous works: Introduction to Mineralogy)
(1768); (Flora of South America' (1771); (De.
scription of the Kinds and Qualities of Plants
Gathered during a Journey to the Islands of
the South Sea, 1772–75' (1776); (Observations
Made during a Voyage Round the World
(1778); and many more.
Forster, John. An English biographer and
historical writer ; born in Newcastle-on-Tyne,
April 2, 1812; died in London, Feb. 2, 1876.
He was educated for the law; held one or two
public offices, and finally engaged in literature
and journalism. He is noted for his (Life of
Charles Dickens) (1871-74). He also wrote:
(Statesmen of the Commonwealth of England)
(1831-34); (Life of Oliver Goldsmith) (1848);
Biographical and Historical Essays' (1859); etc.
Förster, Karl August (férs'ter). A German
poet and translator of poetry; born in Naum-
burg on the Saale, April 3, 1784; died in Dres-
den, Dec. 18, 1841. His versions of Petrarch,
of Tasso's choicer lyric verse, and of Dante's
New Life) (1841), won admiration. He wrote
a work on “Raphael (1827), and has pub-
lished a volume of Poems) (1842).
Forsyth, Joseph. A Scotch descriptive writer;
born in Elgin, Feb. 18, 1763; died there, Sept.
20, 1815. He was a man of taste and training
who gratified a life's ambition by visiting Italy,
where he observed and studied much; aſter-
wards writing Remarks on Antiquities, Arts,
and Letters, during an Excursion in Italy in
the Years 1802 and 1803' (1813), a work of such
merit that it has run through many editions.
Forsyth, William.
