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LILLY

Volume 13 · 431 words · 1842 Edition

JOHN, a dramatic poet, was born in the Wealds of Kent, about the year 1558, and educated in Magdalen College, Oxford, where he took the degree of bachelor of arts in 1573, and that of master in 1575. From Oxford he removed to Cambridge; but how long he continued there is uncertain. On his arrival in London, he became acquainted with some of Queen Elizabeth's courtiers, by whom he was caressed and admired as a poet and a wit; and her majesty, on particular festivals, honoured his dramatic pieces with her presence. His plays are nine in number. His first publication, however, printed in 1580, was a romance called Euphues, which was universally read and admired. This romance, which Blount, the editor of six of his plays, says, introduced a new language, especially amongst the ladies, is, according to Berkenhout, in fact a most contemptible piece of affectation and nonsense. Nevertheless it is very certain, that it was in high estimation amongst the women of fashion of those times, who, we are told by Whalley, the editor of Ben Jonson's works, had all the phrases by heart; and those who did not speak Euphuism were as little regarded at court as if they could not speak French. "He was," says Oldys, "a man of great readings, good memory, ready faculty of application, and uncommon eloquence; but he ran into a vast excess of allusion." When or where he died is not known. Anthony Wood says he was living in 1597, when his last comedy was published. After attending the court of Queen Elizabeth for thirteen years, notwithstanding his reputation as an author, he was under the necessity of petitioning the queen for some small stipend to support him in his old age. His two letters or petitions to her majesty on this subject are preserved in manuscript.

WILLIAM, a noted English astrologer, was born in 1602 in Leicestershire, where his father not being able to give him more learning than common writing and arith- Lilybæum, in Ancient Geography, a city of Sicily, situated on the most westerly promontory of the island, and said to have been founded by the Carthaginians on their expulsion from Motya by Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse. It is remarkable for the three sieges it sustained; one by Dionysius the tyrant, another by Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, and the third by the Romans. The first two failed in their attempts, but the Romans with great difficulty made themselves masters of it. No remains of this once stately city are now to be seen, except some aqueducts and temples.