

OBlTUAl; . (Mi. 



Mutsu. Miiiifinilsii. ( Vunt. a Japanese states- 

 man, died in Yokohama, Am:. H. ivT. lie was 

 prominent in Japanese p 

 war. which found him in the responsible ofli 



-ign Affair* which he continued to 



mi tui iwT. 



AMll William, an English scholar 

 and philosopher. U>rn in l...nd.-ii. .l;;n- 



i.i two years younger than hi- : . i h-r. 



In- survived seven years. 



He WM educated at Oxford and was a fellow from 



1886 to 1830, resigning in 1 1..- latter year because of 



e* against signin- th.-Thirty- 



ninc Articles for his master's degree. Afirr hold- 



ing professorship in Bristol College an .1 Man. 



New College, successively, he was app"inv.| Latin 



professor in t'nivcrsity College in 1846, and he rc- 



.ntil his resignation in l *':',. The 



;-ne- in fuithatid thought between tin- broth- 



laduate days at 

 \pical of the two most prominent 







a care," exclaimed the elder brother in r 

 some doubts uttered by 1 that 



far, you will go further." -When I M further I 

 Vffl go further," was the reply of Francis, and on 

 that principle he always acted." Ti men! 



between the brothers on areount of religious differ- 

 ences lasted forty years, but when they were ol<l the 

 h was healed and nothing was said about their 

 (Miints of differvii .. The year after the cardinal's 

 death, however. Prof. Newman unwisrly published 

 some rather peevish rein: <>f his brother. 



'i showed complet e mi-apprehen-ion of the car- 

 dinal's thought, and which cai. -1 only by 

 reasoi . nhor'- failing mental po\\i-r-. To 

 the spiritual history of the- t\v> brother- ii.. 



.'i ahude.- in his poem "(^ua C'ursum \Yntus." 

 The contributions of Prof. Newman to the reli^iou- 



imewere imi>ortant and far-i 

 ing. **The Soul." the m.-t noted work of hi-, hav- 

 ing been for nearly half a century t he delight of t he 

 ally minded. His personality was most in- 

 teresting and the remarkably wide reach of his 

 mind made conversation with him a continual 

 stimulus. He was an ardent vegetarian, but could 

 hardly be called an ax-Hie. He was twice married. 

 and for many Tears of hi- later life he resided at 

 Weston-su per- Mare, not far from Bristol. II 

 writings, which are very varied, embrace "AGram- 

 le Berber Language " : ' Lectures on Log- 

 (1888); "The Difficulties of Klcmei.t. 

 " (18-1 .lie rnior. 1-11 : "A State 



Church not If 1846 : *A Ih-toryof the 



1 Mtitrastsof Ancient 



and Modern History n-titution 



and Moral Pu-ht or Wrong of our National I M.t " 

 (1841* - Its 90ROWI Hid A>|irati-n- " 



ime- ..f the House of Hapebur 

 -Royal I: 



f H..rner faithfully translated 

 .rhiiM-* K-- 



Orrtd. ^l.i\ ..-rman pat hoi, .-i-i . born 



in Dillinp-n. B < : .lied in 





rnon's 



\ New Translation" (1857): "The- 

 ism" ' Hiawatha translated int.. Latin" 

 h Institutions and their KYr.nn-" 

 (1855); -A Handbook of Modem is66): 

 -Miscellanies" (1*. ,dern 



S ! 



oramoti wealth" 



- 



encesofT r wo Wan" 



(1888). His most noted work was probably his 



" Phases of Faith." l.u' ' ntshim 

 a: his best. 



Munich, .luly !'.. 1V7. After tir-t studyini; phi- 

 lology and hist..ry at Munich, he devoted himself 

 to natural science and medicine, and , 

 came assistant to pp.f. \,.n I'f.-nfer in the I. 



-pital. H- il study of lar- 



yngeal diseases, at hair of lann. 



Munich in 1 s "''? h.- became ti 



< umU'iit. IV"! .(Hired a hi-h reputation 



by his rese.. the SjUolOffT and pathol 



anatomy of diphtheria, and was the tir-t 

 the caii-e of this malady to the development 

 U'erm. the uiirrnrnrctix di/ilit/u nfirnx. The results 

 "f hi- -t mi 1 1>1 i shed in a nioiH'^raph on t he 



lemic of Dij.hlhcria." Hi- noted \\<>rk on 

 " Tli- n in the Circulation of the 



Illood " put forward a new and effective met I 



;<l removing these conditions. 

 Oliph.int. M M.tr-.n el nliph.ml \\ il-on . 

 an Mn^li-h novelist, born in Wallyford, n- 

 buru'h. Midlothian. Sei.tlaml. in" April. ls-js : died 

 in Wimbledon, Kn;:land. .lime "2~t. I^'.IT. While -he 

 was still a chil-. p.... I. 



and there, and in the neighboring I'.irkenhead. her 

 youth was mainly spent. < 'n her marri.-. 



. Oliphant. an artist in -lained j;hi-s, -In went 

 with her hu-band to London, but at the period of 

 hi- death in l s -V.i -lie was living \\ith him in I. 



she removed 

 to Windsor, which 

 was her home for 

 nearly thirty \ 

 till three vears pre- 

 vious t<> her death 

 -he removed t.. 



Wimbledon. 



man . fam- 



ily COllsi-ted 'f two 



sons ami two or- 

 phan nie'-cs whom 

 she educated and 

 cared for. The elder 

 son died in l^'.io 

 when he had nearly 

 r.-a'-hed the a.i;e of 

 thirty-live, and the 

 d son. with 

 whiim she wrote 

 "The Victorian 

 of Literature." after many \ear-of invalidi-m. died 

 -he be-an t<. write earl). Mini a- j.iHures 

 of Scottish life and character her" Mr-. Ma' 

 Maitland" and "Adam (Jraenie." written in her 

 days of author-hip, are much .-uperi-.r. in the 

 opinion of sober critics, to any of the recent 

 tish fictions so popular in the present decade, liut 

 the best amoiii; all her many novel- are th-.-e c., m . 

 prising the "Chronicles <,f ('arlii;. ,<1 of 



in Chapel" aid " I'ho-be Junior" are 

 the chief. In these, and several lai- wit 



and humor di-played. the kei-n analy-is of cl, 

 ,:id the shrewd Vet kindly wi-dom api 

 throughout were the deligfal "f a wide circle of 

 1 placed her hiu'hainon;; noveli-t- of the 

 1 rank and even, in the mind- of many.e-tab- 

 lished a claim to admittance into the lir-t. 'liut the 

 of her work, as a whole, lay in it- eon 

 her pl"K are often ineffective and conven- 

 . and the si rain of continuous production for 

 ars sometimes made itself manifest in 

 the later naif of a story who-e opening was singu- 

 larly promising. She understood both the -hallf>ws 

 of human character, and could <le- 

 them a.** felicitously as she could accurately 

 re them : but. as one critic has -aid. "tl. 

 nius that builds up a great work of imagination 



