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Title : Biography for Beginners

Editor : E. C. Bentley

Illustrator : G. K. Chesterton

Release date : August 26, 2014 [eBook #46691]

Language : English

Credits : Produced by Chris Curnow, MWS and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIOGRAPHY FOR BEGINNERS ***

  

[1]

New Novels
6/-

THE QUESTION
By Parry Truscott
Author of "Catherine"

THE WICKED WORLD
By Alice Maud Meadows
Author of "The Dukedom of Portsea"

JOHN MARVEL
By Thomas Nelson Page
Author of "Red Rock"

By MARY GAUNT
The Uncounted Cost
Part Author of "The Silent Ones"

By HALLIWELL SUTCLIFFE
A Winter's Comedy
A Tale of Yorkshire

By VICTORIA CROSS
The Eternal Fires
Contains portrait of Author in Colours

By SHAN F. BULLOCK
Master John
Author of "Robert Thorne"

By STANLEY PORTAL HYATT
Black Sheep
Author of "The Marriage of Hilary Carden"


[2]

BIOGRAPHY
FOR
BEGINNERS


[3]

Fine Editions of this Book

are also issued

at 2/6 net and 6/- net


[4]

BIOGRAPHY

FOR

BEGINNERS

BEING A COLLECTION OF MISCELLANEOUS
EXAMPLES FOR THE USE OF UPPER FORMS

Edited by E. CLERIHEW, B.A.
With 40 Diagrams by G. K. CHESTERTON

LONDON
T. WERNER LAURIE
CLIFFORD'S INN


[5]
[6]

LIST OF CONTENTS

Introductory Remarks
Sir Christopher Wren
Miguel de Cervantes
George Bernard Shaw
Sir Humphrey Davy
J. S. Mill
François Liszt
Lord Clive
King Edward the Confessor
The Rev. John Clifford, M.A., LL.B., D.D.
Messrs Chapman & Hall
Karl Marx
Otto the Great
Marconi
David Hume
Mr H. Belloc
Job
Pizarro
The Duke of Fife, K.T., P.C., G.C.V.O.
The Duke of Wellington
John Bunyan
George Hirst
Erasmus and the Humanists
Besant and Rice
Tiziano Vecelli
Professor James Dewar, F.R.S.
Sir Walter Raleigh
Jane Austen
Odo of Bayeux
David Ricardo
Sir Thomas à Mallory
Mr Alfred Beit
Cimabue
President Roosevelt
Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford
Sir Alexander Fuller Acland-Hood, M.P.
Mahomet
Edvard Grieg
Jan Van Eyck
Mr T. Werner Laurie
Index of Psychology


[7]

INTRODUCTORY REMARKS

The Art of Biography
Is different from Geography.
Geography is about Maps,
But Biography is about Chaps.

[8]


[9]

SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN

Sir Christopher Wren
Said, "I am going to dine with some men.
"If anybody calls
"Say I am designing St. Paul's."

[10]


[11]

MIGUEL DE CERVANTES

The people of Spain think Cervantes
Equal to half-a-dozen Dantes:
An opinion resented most bitterly
By the people of Italy.

[12]


[13]

GEORGE BERNARD SHAW

Mr Bernard Shaw
Was just setting out for the war,
When he heard it was a dangerous trade
And demonstrably underpaid.

[14]


[15]

SIR HUMPHREY DAVY

Sir Humphrey Davy
Abominated gravy.
He lived in the odium
Of having discovered Sodium.

[16]


[17]

J. S. MILL

John Stuart Mill,
By a mighty effort of will,
Overcame his natural bonhomie
And wrote "Principles of Political Economy."

[18]


[19]

FRANÇOIS LISZT

The Abbé Liszt
Hit the piano with his fist.
That was the way
He used to play.

[20]


[21]

LORD CLIVE

What I like about Clive
Is that he is no longer alive.
There is a great deal to be said
For being dead.

[22]


[23]

KING EDWARD THE CONFESSOR

Edward the Confessor
Slept under the dresser.
When that began to pall,
He slept in the hall.

[24]


[25]

THE REV. JOHN CLIFFORD
M.A., LL.B., D.D.

Dr Clifford
And I have differed.
He disapproves of gin:
I disapprove of sin.

[26]


[27]

MESSRS CHAPMAN & HALL

Chapman & Hall
Swore not at all.
Mr Chapman's yea was yea,
And Mr Hall's nay was nay.

[28]


[29]

KARL MARX

Karl Marx
Was completely wrapped up in his sharks.
The poor creatures seriously missed him
While he was attacking the capitalist system.

[30]


[31]

OTTO THE GREAT

The great Emperor Otto
Could not decide upon a motto.
His mind wavered between
" L'Etat C'est Moi " and " Ich Dien ."

[32]


[33]

MARCONI

Guglielmo Marconi
Was brought up on macaroni,
But when he gets it now
There's no end of a row.

[34]


[35]

DAVID HUME

That you have all heard of Hume
I tacitly assume;
But you didn't know, perhaps,
That his parents were Lapps.

[36]


[37]

MR H. BELLOC

Mr Hilaire Belloc
Is a case for legislation ad hoc.
He seems to think nobody minds
His books being all of different kinds.

[38]


[39]

JOB

It is understood that Job
Never read "The Globe;"
But nothing could be higher than
His opinion of Leviathan.

[40]


[41]

PIZARRO

The views of Pizarro
Were perhaps a little narrow.
He killed the Caciques
Because (he said) they were sneaks.

[42]


[43]

THE DUKE OF FIFE
K.T., P.C., G.C.V.O.

It looked bad when the Duke of Fife
Left off using a knife;
But people began to talk
When he left off using a fork.

[44]


[45]

THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON

The great Duke of Wellington
Reduced himself to a skellington.
He reached seven stone two,
And then——Waterloo!

[46]


[47]

JOHN BUNYAN

I do not extenuate Bunyan's
Intemperate use of onions,
But if I knew a wicked ogress
I would lend her "The Pilgrim's Progress."

[48]


[49]

GEORGE HIRST

When I faced the bowling of Hirst
I ejaculated, "Do your worst!"
He said, "Right you are, Sid."
----And he did.

[50]


[51]

ERASMUS AND THE HUMANISTS

After dinner, Erasmus
Told Colet not to be "blas'mous"
Which Colet, with some heat,
Requested him to repeat.

[52]


[53]

BESANT AND RICE

Sir (then Mr) Walter Besant
Would never touch pheasant,
But Mr James Rice
Thought it so nice.

[54]


[55]

TIZIANO VECELLI

When the great Titian
Was in a critical condition,
He was carefully nursed
By Francis the First.

[56]


[57]

PROFESSOR JAMES DEWAR, F.R.S.

Professor Dewar
Is a better man than you are.
None of you asses
Can condense gases.

[58]


[59]

SIR WALTER RALEIGH

Sir Walter Raleigh
Bickered down the valley.
But he could do better than the rill,
For he could bicker up-hill.

[60]


[61]

JANE AUSTEN

The novels of Jane Austen
Are the ones to get lost in.
I wonder if Labby
Has read "Northanger Abbey?"

[62]


[63]

ODO OF BAYEUX

Archbishop Odo
Was just in the middle of "Dodo,"
When he remembered that it was Sunday.
" Sic transit gloria mundi ."

[64]


[65]

DAVID RICARDO

The intrepid Ricardo
With characteristic bravado,
Alluded openly to Rent
Wherever he went.

[66]


[67]

SIR THOMAS À MALLORY

Sir Thomas à Mallory
Always went to the gallery.
He said, not without nous,
That it was the best place in the house.

[68]


[69]

MR ALFRED BEIT

Mr Alfred Beit
Screamed suddenly in the night.
When they asked him why
He made no reply.

[70]


[71]

CIMABUE

When they told Cimabue
He didn't know how to cooee,
He replied, "Perhaps I mayn't,
But I do know how to paint."

[72]


[73]

PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT

If only Mr Roosevelt
Knew how officers in the Blues felt,
He wouldn't be so rife
With his Strenuous Life.

[74]


[75]

ROBERT HARLEY, EARL OF OXFORD

People wondered why Harley
Sang "Wae's me for Prince Charlie."
"It is childish," they said, "to mourn
For a person not yet born."

[76]


[77]

SIR ALEXANDER FULLER ACLAND-HOOD, M.P.

Sir Alexander Acland-Hood
Believed in Free Food:
But he was Eleusinian
About this opinion.

[78]


[79]

MAHOMET

I am not Mahomet.
----Far from it.
That is the mistake
All of you seem to make.

[80]


[81]

EDVARD GRIEG

The musician Grieg
Joined the Primrose League.
It gave him the idea of his chorus,
"The Unburied Ichthyosaurus."

[82]


[83]

JAN VAN EYCK

The younger Van Eyck
Was christened Jan, and not Mike.
The thought of this curious mistake
Often kept him awake.

[84]


[85]

MR T. WERNER LAURIE

Mr Werner Laurie
Is not at all sorry
He undertook the publication
Of this instructive compilation.

[86]


[87]
[88]

INDEX OF PSYCHOLOGY.

( In all work of a biographic character it is important to make copious reference to as many as possible of the generally-recognised virtues, vices, good points, foibles, peculiarities, tricks, characteristics, little weaknesses, traits, imperfections, fads, idiosyncrasies, singularities, morbid symptoms, oddities, faults, and regrettable propensities set forth in the following table. The form of an alphabetic index, with references to the examples given in the preceding pages, has been chosen, so that the beginner who may be desirous, when trying his hand at work of this sort, of seeing how any given one of these subjects may best be treated, is enabled at once to turn to one or more model passages. )

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[93]

Printed by A. M. Cowan & Co., Ltd.
St John's Hall, Perth, N.B.

Transcriber's Notes


Obvious punctuation errors repaired.

Author of The "Dukedom of Portsea" has been replaced with
Author of "The Dukedom of Portsea"

In the "List of Contents", "Jane Austin" has been replaced with "Jane Austen".