ARNOLD 



388 



Dead and Tristram and Isolde, he wrote many 



beautiful but shorter poems, among which are 



The Forsaken Merman, Dover Beach and A 



Summer Night. His Thyrsis stands with 



Lycidas and Adonais as one of the finest elegies 



in English. The bulk of his poetry is rela- 



*ively small. Of his critical essays the best 



n are contained in the two series of Essays 



"nsm, which continue to exert a real 



>n criticism. Among his other prose 



Culture and Anarchy, On Trans- 



nd Literature and Dogma. 



MAS (1795-1842), a celebrated 



rgyman and teacher, known 



; ld as the beloved head- 



m Brown's School Days. 



Isle of Wight, studied 



ARREST 



waska and Ottawa rivers and on the Canadian 

 Pacific and Grand Trunk railways, thirty-seven 

 miles west of Ottawa. Arnprior has large lum- 

 ber and woolen mills and several cheese fac- 

 tories. Marble quarries are not far away, and 

 there are also lead and iron mines. The 

 Ottawa River, which widens at Arnprior into 

 Lac des Chats (that is, Cat Lake), provides 

 good bass fishing. The town has a beautiful 

 site overlooking the lake, and is well laid out. 

 Population in 1911, 4,405. 



AROMATIC, airomat'ik, PLANTS. The 

 word aromatic comes from a Greek word which 

 means spice, and is applied to those plants 

 which have a sharp, pleasant taste and a spicy 

 odor. They are used in many ways as a 

 flavoring in various foods, as perfume and in 

 medicine, either to disguise the unpleasant 

 taste of drugs or to exercise some real or 

 fancied medicinal power. These aromatic 

 plants are numerous, and some of them are 

 very well known, for they include cinnamon, 

 cloves, vanilla, peppermint, thyme, sage, laven- 

 der, anise, caraway, ginger, sandalwood and 

 many more. All are described in their alpha- 

 betical places in these volumes. 



ARREST', the legal act which deprives a 

 person of his liberty. The term comes from 

 a French word meaning to stop. A sheriff, his 

 -Duty or assistant, a justice of the peace, a 

 able or any police officer may make ar- 

 \ private citizen may arrest a person 

 committed a crime or a breach of 

 *' Ms presence and officers may 

 pected of committing a crime, 

 made in civil cases, but a 

 s creditors may be arrested, 

 cessarily deprive a person 

 the crime for which he 

 nature that it is not 

 ive him his liberty, 

 to furnish bail for 

 L person accused of 

 to bail (see BAIL). 

 on any charge is 

 peedily as the ma- 

 possible. If one 

 ised he may apply 

 ^as corpus (which 

 ry upon his ac- 

 ig him. 



-.sed may enjoy 



'\lled for trial, 



^mission from 



ust not leave 



