Character Sketches of Romance Volume I Part 77
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CLEVE'LAND _(Barbara Villiers, d.u.c.h.ess of)_, one of the mistresses of Charles II., introduced by Sir W. Scott in _Peveril of the Peak_.
_Cleve'land_ (Captain Clement), alias Vaughan [_Vawn_], "the pirate,"
son of Norna of the Fitful Head. He is in love with Minna Troil (daughter of Magnus Troil, the udaller of Zetland).--Sir W. Scott, _The Pirate_ (time, William III).
CLEVER, the man-servant of Hero Sutton, "the city maiden." When Hero a.s.sumed the guise of a quaker, Clever called himself Obadiah, and pretended to be a rigid quaker also. His constant exclamation was "Umph! "--S. Knowles, _Woman's Wit, etc_. (1838).
Clifford _(Sir Thomas_), betrothed to Julia (daughter of Master Walter "the hunchback"). He is wise, honest, truthful, and well-favored, kind, valiant, and prudent.--S. Knowles, _The Hunchback_ (1831).
_Clifford, (Mr.)_, the heir of Sir William Charlton in right of his mother, and in love with Lady Emily Gayville. The scrivener Alscrip had fraudulently got possession of the deeds of the Charlton estates, which he had given to his daughter called "the heiress," and which amounted to 2000 a year; but Rightly, the lawyer, discovered the fraud, and "the heiress" was compelled to relinquish this part of her fortune. Clifford then proposed to Lady Emily, and was accepted.--General Burgoyne, _The Heiress_. (1781).
_Clifford (Paul)_, a highwayman, reformed by the power of love.--Lord Lytton, _Paul Clifford_ (1830).
_Clifford (Rosamond)_, usually called "The Fair Rosamond," the favorite mistress of Henry II.; daughter of Walter Lord Clifford. She is introduced by Tennyson in his tragedy _Becket_. Miss Terry acted the part. Dryden says:
_Jane_ Clifford was her name, as books aver, "Fair Rosamond" was but her _nom de guerre.
Epilogue to Henry II_.
_Clifford (Henry Lord_), a general in the English army.--Sir W. Scott, _Castle Dangerous_ (time, Henry I.).
CLIFTON (_Harry_), lieutenant of H.M. s.h.i.+p _Tiger_. A daring, das.h.i.+ng, care-for-n.o.body young English sailor, delighting in adventure, and loving a good sc.r.a.pe. He and his companion Mat Mizen take the side of El Hyder, and help to re-establish the Chereddin, Prince of Delhi, who had been dethroned by Hamlet Abdulerim.--Barrymore, _El Hyder, Chief of the Ghaut Mountains_.
CLIM OF THE CLOUGH. (See CLYM).
CLINK (_Jem_), the turnkey at Newgate.--Sir W. Scott, _Peveril of the Peak_ (time, Charles II).
CLINKER (_Humphry_), a poor work-house lad, put out by the parish as apprentice to a blacksmith, and afterwards employed as an ostler's a.s.sistant and extra postilion. Being dismissed from the stables, he enters the service of Mr. Bramble, a fretful, grumpy, but kind-hearted and generous old gentleman, greatly troubled with gout. Here he falls in love with Winifred Jenkins, Miss Tabitha Brambles's maid, and turns out to be a natural son of Mr. Bramble.--T. Smollett, _The Expedition of Humphry Clinker_ (1771.)
CLIP'PURSE (_Lawyer_), the lawyer employed by Sir Everard Waverley to make his will.--Sir W. Scott, _Waverley_ (time, George II.).
CLIQUOT (_Klee'ko_), a nickname given by _Punch_ to Frederick William IV. of Prussia, from his love of champagne of the "Cliquot brand"
(1795, 1840-1861).
c.l.i.tANDRE, a wealthy bourgeois, in love with Henriette, "the thorough woman," by whom he is beloved with fervent affection. Her elder sister, Armande (2 _syl_.), also loves him, but her love is of the platonic hue, and c.l.i.tandre prefers in a wife the warmth of woman's love to the marble of philosophic ideality.--Moliere, _Les Femmes Savantes_ (1672).
CLOACI'NA, the presiding personification of city sewers. (Latin, _cloaca_, "a sewer.")
...Cloacina, G.o.ddess of the tide, Whose sable streams beneath the city glide.
Gay, _Trivia_, ii. (1712).
CLOD'DIPOLE (3 _syl_.), "the wisest lout of all the neighboring plain." Appointed to decide the contention between Cuddy and Lobbin Clout.
From Cloddipole we learn to read the skies, To know when hail will fall, or winds arise; He taught us erst the heifer's tail to view, When struck aloft that showers would straight ensue.
He first that useful secret did explain, That p.r.i.c.king corns foretell the gathering rain; When swallows fleet soar high and sport in air, He told us that the welkin would be clear.
Gay, _Pastoral_, i. (1714).
(Cloddipole is the "Palaemon" of Virgil's _Ecl._ iii.).
CLO'DIO _(Count)_, governor. A dishonorable pursuer of Zeno'cia, the chaste troth-plight wife of Arnoldo.--Beaumont and Fletcher, _The Custom of the Country_ (1647).
_Clodio_, the younger son of Don Antonio, a c.o.xcomb and braggart.
Always boasting of his great acquaintances, his conquests, and his duels. His snuff-box he thinks more of than his lady-love, he interlards his speech with French, and exclaims "Split me!" by way of oath. Clodio was to have married Angelina, but the lady preferred his elder brother, Carlos, a bookworm, and Clodio engaged himself to Elvira of Lisbon.--C. Cibber, _Love Makes a Man_ (1694).
CLO'E, in love with the shepherd, Thenot, but Thenot rejects her suit out of admiration of the constancy of Clorinda for her dead lover. She is wanton, coa.r.s.e, and immodest, the very reverse of Clorinda, who is a virtuous, chaste, and faithful shepherdess. ("Thenot," the final _t_ is sounded.)--John Fletcher, _The Faithful Shepherdess_ (1610). (See CHLOE).
CLO'RA, sister of Fabrit'io, the merry soldier, and the sprightly companion of Frances (sister to Frederick).--Beaumont and Fletcher, _The Captain_ (1613).
CLORIDA'NO, a humble Moorish youth, who joined Medo'ro in seeking the body of King Dardinello to bury it. Medoro being wounded, Cloridano rushed madly into the ranks of the enemy and was slain.--Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_ (1516).
CLORIN'DA, daughter of Sena'pus of Ethiopia (a Christian). Being born white, her mother changed her for a black child. The Eunuch a.r.s.e'tes (3 _syl_.) was entrusted with the infant Clorinda, and as he was going through a forest, saw a tiger, dropped the child, and sought safety in a tree. The tiger took the babe and suckled it, after which the eunuch carried the child to Egypt. In the siege of Jerusalem by the Crusaders, Clorinda was a leader of the Pagan forces. Tancred fell in love with her, but slew her unknowingly in a night attack. Before she expired she received Christian baptism at the hands of Tancred, who greatly mourned her death.--Ta.s.so, _Jerusalem Delivered_, xii. (1675).
(The story of Clorinda is borrowed from the _Theag'anes and Charicle'a_ of Heliodorus Bishop of Trikka).
_Clorinda_, "the faithful shepherdess" called "The Virgin of the Grove," faithful to her buried love. From this beautiful character Milton has drawn his "lady" in _Comus_. Compare the words of the "First Brother" about chast.i.ty, in Milton's _Comus_, with these lines of Clorinda:
Yet I have heard (my mother told it me), And now I do believe it, if I keep My virgin flower uncropt, pure, chaste, and fair, No goblin, wood-G.o.d, fairy, elf, or fiend, Satyr, or other power that haunts the groves Shall hurt my body, or by vain illusion Draw me to wander after idle fires, Or voices calling me in dead of night To make me follow and so tole me on Through mire and standing-pools, to find my ruin.
...Sure there's a power In the great name of Virgin that binds fast All rude, uncivil bloods.... Then strong Chast.i.ty, Be thou my strongest guard.
--J. Fletcher,--_The Faithful Shepherdess_ (1610).
CLORIS, the damsel beloved by Prince Prettyman.--Duke of Buckingham, _The Rehearsal_ (1671).
CLOTAIRE (2 _syl_). The King of France exclaimed on his death-bed: "Oh, how great must be the King of Heaven, if He can kill so mighty a monarch as I am!"--_Gregory of Tours_, iv. 21.
CLOTEN or CLOTON, King of Cornwall, one of the five kings of Britain after the extinction of the line of Brute (1 _syl_.).--Geoffrey, _British History_, ii. 17 (1142).
_Cloten_, a vindictive lout, son of the second wife of Cymbeline by a former husband. He is noted for "his unmeaning frown, his shuffling gait, his burst of voice, his bustling insignificance, his fever-and-ague fits of valor, his froward tetchiness, his unprincipled malice, and occasional gleams of good sense." Cloten is the rejected lover of Imogen (the daughter of his father-in-law by his first wife), and is slain in a duel by Guiderius.--Shakespeare, _Cymbeline_ (1605).
CLOTHA'RIUS or CLOTHAIRE, leader of the Franks after the death of Hugo. He is shot with an arrow by Clorinda.--Ta.s.so, _Jerusalem Delivered_, xi. (1675).
_Cloud (St.)_, patron saint of nail-smiths. A play on the French word _clou_ ("a nail").
CLOUDES'LEY _(William of_), a famous north-country archer, the companion of Adam Bell and Clym of the Clough. Their feats of robbery were chiefly carried on in Englewood Forest, near Carlisle. William was taken prisoner at Carlisle, and was about to be hanged, but was rescued by his two companions. The three then went to London to ask pardon of the King, which at the Queen's intercession was granted. The King begged to see specimens of their skill in archery, and was so delighted therewith, that he made William a "gentleman of fe," and the other two "yemen of his chambre." The feat of William was very similar to that of William Tell _(q.v.)._--Percy, _Reliques_, I. ii. 1.
CLOUT _(Colin)_, a shepherd loved by Marian "the parson's maid,"
but for whom Colin (who loved Cicily) felt no affection. (See COLIN CLOUT).
Young Colin Clout, a lad of peerless meed, Full well could dance, and deftly tune the reed; In every wood his carols sweet were known, At every wake his nimble feats were shown.
Gay, _Pastoral_, ii. (1714).
_Clout (Loblin)_, a shepherd in love with Blouzelinda. He challenged Cuddy to a contest of song in praise of their respective sweethearts, and Cloddipole was appointed umpire. Cloddipole was unable to award the prize, for each merited "an oaken staff for his pains." "Have done, however, for the herds are weary of the song, and so am I."--Gay, _Pastoral_, i. (1714).
CLOYSE _(Goody)._ A pious and exemplary dame, especially well-versed in the catechism, who, in Goodman Brown's fantasy of the witches'
revel in the forest, joins him on his way thither, and croaks over the loss of her broomstick, which was "all anointed with the juice of small-age and cinquefoil and wolf's bane--" "Mingled with fine wheat and the fat of a new-born babe," says another shape.--Nathaniel Hawthorne, _Mosses from an Old Manse_ (1854).
Character Sketches of Romance Volume I Part 77
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