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Boy and the Dolphin. A statue | executed by Raphael (1483-1520), the Italian painter, and pronounced a remarkable work of sculpture." It is in the possession of Sir Hervey Bruce, London.

Boy Blowing Bubbles. A well-
known and beautiful picture by
Franz van Mieris (1635-1681). At
the Hague, Holland.

Boy Praying. A bronze statue,
considered one of the finest relics
of ancient sculpture, discovered
in the bed of the Tiber. It was
purchased by Frederic II. of Prus-
sia for 10,000 thalers, and placed
in his palace at Potsdam. Now
in the Museum at Berlin. It is
known of Boëdas, son of Lysip-
pus, the celebrated Greek sculp-
tor,
that he executed the statue
of a praying figure, and by many
this is believed to be his work.

O genius of new days!

Hail from thine ancient tomb;
Now let thy spirit's blaze

Chase the old world of gloom.

Bright one! thine influence pour
On man, so prone and sad;
And teach him how to adore,
And to be free and glad.

N. L. Frothingham. Boy with a Squirrel. A picture by John Singleton Copley, the American painter (1737-1815). In possession of Mrs. James S. Amory.

Braccio Nuovo. A hall in the Vatican, Rome, built in 1817 under Pius VII., filled with valuable works of sculpture.

"This noble hall is upwards of 200 feet in length, and admirably lighted from a roof supported by Corinth ian columns. It is impossible for works of sculpture to be better disposed; and, out of 72 busts and 43 statues which are here, there is hardly one which is not excellent." Hillard.

All this shows itself in the Braccio

Nuoro and in countless statues besides, such as the Augustus and the Tiberius.

Taine, Trans.

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Brae-Mar. A picture by Sir Edwin Landseer (1803–1873), the celebrated English painter of animals. It is pronounced the noblest single figure which he has painted, a stately stag, stand ing clearly out on a misty hilltop, and bellowing defiance, while near him are several does." This picture was sold for $21,000 in 1868.

Brambletye House. An ancient
mansion of the reign of Henry
VII., near the royal forest of
Ashdown, in Sussex, England.
With its gables and chimneys,
moat and drawbridge, it remained
an object of interest and curiosity
till about 60 years since. About
the middle of the seventeenth
century Sir Henry Compton
erected an elegant baronial man-
sion, but after the Civil War it
was deserted. It is now only a
picturesque ruin. Horace Smith's
romance of" Brambletye House"
has its opening scenes laid here.
Bramfield Oak. A noted tree of
great size, not far from Norwich,
in England, the age of which ex-
ceeded 1,000 years. It fell in 1843,
from simple decay.

Brancacci Chapel. See CAPELLA
BRANCACCI.

Brandenburg Gate. [Ger. Das
Brandenburger Thor.] A noted
gate and entrance-way into the
city of Berlin, Prussia. It is said
to have been modelled after the
Propylæum at Athens. On the
summit is a triumphal car, which
was carried by Napoleon to Paris,
but afterwards recovered.

Brandywine, The. A noted frig-
ate of the United States navy, in
service in the war of 1812. She
was fitted up to convey Lafayette
home to France in 1824 on his re-
turn from his visit to this coun-
try.
Branksome Hall. A mansion near

Hawick, Scotland, belonging to
the Duke of Buccleuch, and asso-
ciated with Scott's poem of the
Lay of the Last Minstrel.”

Such is the custom of Branksome Hall.

Scott

Why did I leave fair Branksome's towers, Why did I leave sweet Teviot glen? William Wilson. Braschi Antinous. See ANTINOUS, THE (6).

Braschi Palace. [Ital. Palazzo Braschi.] A well-known palace in Rome, built near the end of the last century by Pius VI. for his nephew, the Duke of Braschi.

"As you ascend the staircase, you will be struck with its noble architecture, which is in the most chaste and classical taste. The stairs are led up between a colonnade of columns of red Oriental granite, the high polish of which accords well with the lustre of the variegated marbles, and with the graceful symmetry and just design of the whole." Eaton.

Brazen Head. See FRIAR BACON'S
BRAZEN HEAD.
Brazen Nose College. One of the
colleges included in the Univer-
sity of Oxford, England. The
tradition is, that its quaint name
is derived from the circumstance
that it was erected on the site of

two ancient halls, one of which

was called Brazen Nose Hall on
account of an iron ring fixed in
a nose of brass, and serving as a
knocker to the gate.

Bread and Cheese Land. The
name given to a piece of ground,
twenty acres in extent, in the
parish of Biddenden, Kent, Eng-
land, where, it is said, pursuant
to the will of two maiden sisters,
born in 1110 (and traditionally
said to have been joined together
by the shoulders and hips), "on
the afternoon of Easter Sunday,
600 rolls are distributed to stran-
gers, and 270 loaves, weighing
three pounds and a half each, are
given to the poor of the parish,
the expense being defrayed by
the rental of the land."
Bread Street. A street in London,
so named from the market in
which bread was formerly sold.
Stow says that in the year 1302,
which was the 30th of Edward I.,
the bakers of London were forced
to sell no bread in their shops or
houses, but in the market. In
this street John Milton was born,
Dec. 9, 1608; and in the Church

of All Hallows (now destroyed), at the corner of Bread Street and Watling Street, he was baptized. Dec. 20, 1608. See MERMAID TAVERN.

Brèche de Roland. [Roland's Breach.] A famous mountain pass in the Pyrenees, deriving its name from the tradition that Roland opened the passage with a blow of his sword, Durandal. It is the colossal entrance way from France to Spain, 200 feet wide, 300 feet high, and 50 feet long, at an elevation of more than 9,000 feet above the level of the

sea.

Breda, Surrender of. See SUR-
RENDER OF BREDA.

Brède, La. An interesting and
ancient château, in the vicinity
of Bordeaux, France. It is the
seat of the Montesquieu family.
It was here that the great histori-
an and philosopher of that name
was born and wrote.

Brederode Castle. A picturesque
ruined fortress of the Middle
Ages, in the neighborhood of
Haarlem, Holland.

Breed's Hill. An eminence (for-
merly so called) in Charlestown,
now a part of Boston, Mass. See
BUNKER HILL MONUMENT.

Brera, La. A palace in Milan, Italy, containing a famous gallery of paintings, together with a museum of antiquities. The building was erected in 1618, and is said to derive its name from the Latin prædium, meadow.

Leonardo da Vinci's angels do not quite please me, elegant, refined, and lovely as they are: "methinks they smile too much." By his scholar Luini there are some angels in the gallery of the Brera, swinging censers and playing on musical instruments, which, with the peculiar character of the Milanese school, combine all the grace of a purer, loftier nature. Mrs. Jameson.

Breton Club. A political associa

tion formed at Versailles, France, in 1789. The name was subsequently changed to that of the Jacobin Club.

Bridal Veil. 1. A noted fall in the Yosemite Valley, Cal. The water falling from a height of 1,000

feet is converted into mist before reaching the bottom.

2. A slender fall on the American shore, at Niagara Falls.

Bride's, St. See ST. BRIDE'S.

a

work

Bridewell. Formerly house and prison, now a hospital in London. The prison was founded upon the ancient palace of Bridewell, in which is laid the whole third act of Shakespeare's "Henry VIII." The name is derived from the famous well (St. Bride's, or St. Bridget's Well) in the vicinity of St. Bride's Church; and, this prison being the first of its kind, other houses of correction upon the same plan were called Bridewells.

Bridge of Alcantara. See PUENTE DE ALCANTARA.

Bridge of Balgownie. See BRIG O' BALGOWNIE.

Bridge of Lodi. A bridge over

the river Adda, at Lodi, in Italy, famous in military history in connection with the wars of Napoleon.

Battles and bloodshed, September massacres. Bridges of Lodi, retreats of Moscow, Waterloos, Peterloos, ten-pound franchises, tar-barrels and guillotines.

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Carlyle.

Shall future ages tell this tale
Of inconsistence faint and frail?
And art thou He of Lodi's bridge,
Marengo's field, and Wagram's ridge?

Scott.

Bridge of St. Angelo. This bridge

the ancient Pons Elius-which crosses the Tiber immediately opposite the Castle of St. Angelo in Rome, was erected by Hadrian as a passage to his mausoleum. At the end are the statues of St. Peter and St. Paul. See ST. ANGELO.

"The piers and arches are ancient, but have been a good deal repaired; not, indeed, till it was necessary, for in the Pontificate of Clement VII., when crowds were pressing forward to St. Peter's to share in the benefits and indulgences offered to the pious there, the bridge gave way, and 172 persons are said to have perished in the Tiber." Eaton.

Even as the Romans, for the mighty host,
The year of jubilee, upon the bridge,
Have chosen a mode to pass the people

over:

For all upon one side towards the Castle Their faces have, and go unto St. Peter's; On the other side they go towards the Mountain.

Dante (Inferno), Longfellow's Trans.

I may be wrong; but the Tiber has a voice for me, as it whispers to the piers of the Pons Elius, even more full of meaning than my well-beloved Charles eddying round the piles of West Boston Bridge. Holmes.

Bridge of Segovia. See PUENTE DEL DIABLO.

Bridge of Sighs. [Ital. Ponte dei Sospiri.] This bridge over the Rio Canal in Venice, Italy, connecting the Doge's palace and the state prisons, is so called because the condemned passed over it on the way to execution. "The Bridge of Sighs" is also the title of a well-known poem by Thomas Hood (1798-1845), which begins:

"One more unfortunate,

Weary of breath."

"The Venice of modern fiction and drama is a thing of yesterday, a mere efflorescence of decay, a stagedrama, which the first ray of daylight must dissipate into dust. No prisoner 'whose name is worth remembering, or whose sorrows deserved sympathy, ever crossed that Bridge of Sighs, which is the centre of the Byronic ideal of Venice." Ruskin.

"The Bridge of Sighs was not built till the end of the sixteenth century, and no romantic episode of political imprisonment and punishment (except that of Antonio Foscarini) occurs in Venetian history later than that period. But the Bridge of Sighs could have nowise a savor of sentiment from any such episode; being, as it was, merely a means of communication between the criminal courts sitting in the Ducal Palace and the criminal prison across the little canal. Housebreakers, cut-purse knaves, and murderers do not commonly impart a poetic interest to places which have known them; and yet these are the only sufferers on whose Bridge of Sighs the whole sentimental world has looked with pathetic sensation ever since Byron drew attention to it. The name of the bridge was given by the people from that opulence of compassion which enables the Itallans to pity even rascality in difficul ties." W. D. Howells.

I stood in Venice, on the Bridge of Sighs: A palace and a prison on each hand.

Byron. Bridgewater Gallery. See BRIDGEWATER HOUSE.

Bridgewater House. The town residence of the Earl of Ellesmere, London, built in 1847-49 on the site of Cleveland House,

where once resided Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland, and which had at different times belonged to the great Earl of Clarendon, and to the Earls of Bridgewater. It contains a very celebrated collection of pictures, called the Bridgewater Gallery, and sometimes the Stafford Gallery; it having been left by the Duke of Bridgewater to his nephew, the Marquis of Stafford. It is the finest private collection in England; comprising some of the best works of Raphael, Titian, Guido, Domenichino, Rubens, Rembrandt, Vandyke, and other masters, as well as those of the modern artists.

"From the time of Raphael the series is more complete than in any private gallery I know, not excepting the Lichtenstein Gallery at Vienna. The Caracci school can nowhere be studied to more advantage."

Mrs. Jameson.

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Brig o' Balgownie. A famous bridge of a single arch near Aberdeen, Scotland, built in the time of Robert Bruce (1274-1329). It has been made familiar by Byron, who alludes to it in his poem of "Don Juan."

"It is a single gray stone arch, apparently cut from solid rock, that spans the brown rippling waters, where wild overhanging banks, shadowy trees, and dipping wild flowers, all conspire to make a romantic picture. This bridge, with the river and scenery, were poetic items that went, with other things, to form the sensitive mind of Byron, who lived here in his earlier days. He has some lines about it: — 'As "Auld lang Syne" brings Scotland, one and all,

Scotch plaids, Scotch snoods, the blue hills, and clear streams,

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Brignole Sale Palace. [Ital. Palazzo Brignole Sale.] A beautiful palace in Genoa, Italy, now the property of the city, and containing many fine treasures of art.

It derives its name rosso from being painted of a red color. It formerly belonged to the Brignole family.

Britain, Little. See LITTLE BRITAIN.

Britannia Bridge. A famous iron tubular bridge across Menai Strait, which separates the island of Anglesea from Carnarvon, Wales. It consists of two lines of tubes, each 1,513 feet long, supported on three piers, in addition to the abutments, 100 feet above the sea. It is situated one mile from the Menai suspension bridge.

A fourth [stone in the substructure of a temple at Baalbec] of similar dimensions is Ivmg in the quarry, which it is calculated must weigh alone more than 1,100 tons in its rough state, or nearly as much as one of the tubes of the Britannia Bridge. Fergusson. Britannia Theatre. A well-built theatre in London, opened in 1858.

British Coffee-house. A London coffee-house, formerly frequented by Scotchmen.

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collection having been made in 1753, and it having been opened to the public 1759. It was at first divided into three departments, viz.: Printed Books, Manuscripts, and Natural History. To these have since been added other departments, as Antiquities and Arts, Medals and Coins, Prints and Drawings, Zoological Collections, etc. The Elgin marbles, the Egyptian antiquities, and the Assyrian sculptures collected by Layard, are among the chief curiosities of the institution. The Library is one of the largest and most valuable in Europe. Brittany Sheep. A picture by Rosa Bonheur (b. 1822), the celebrated French painter of animals. Broad Street. One of the great thoroughfares of Philadelphia, Penn. It is over 100 feet in width, and runs in a straight line 15 miles.

Broadway. A noted street, and the great thoroughfare of New York, extending from the Battery, at the extreme lower end of the island, to Central Park. In respect of length, the imposing character of its buildings, and the importance of the business transacted in it, this avenue is unequalled in the world.

Princes' Street, the Broadway of the new town, is built along the edge of the ravine facing the long, many-windowed walls of the Canongate. N. P. Willis.

He's so innate a cockney, that had he been born

Where plain bare-skin's the only fulldress that is worn,

He'd have given his own such an air that you'd say

"T had been made by a tailor to lounge in Broadway. Lowell.

Tell me not, in half-derision,

Of your Boulevards Parisian,

With their brilliant broad pavés,

Still for us the best is nearest,

And the last love is the dearest,
And the Queen of Streets-Broadway.
W. A. Butler.

For the wide sidewalks of Broadway are then

Gorgeous as are a rivulet's banks in June,

That, overhung with blossoms, through its glen

Slides soft away beneath the sunny noon,

And they who search the untrodden wood for flowers

Meet in its depths no lovelier ones than ours. Bryant (Spring in Town). See

Brocken, Spectre of the.

SPECTRE OF THE BROCKEN. Brohlthal. This lovely valley of the Rhine is surrounded by mountains, and a rapid brook runs through it. It is especially remarkable that the whole bottom of the valley consists of tuffstone 15 to 50 feet in thickness. Brömserburg. A well-known ruined castle at Rüdesheim, on the Rhine.

Bronze Door [of the Capitol at Washington]. A work of art, forming the entrance to the Rotunda of the Capitol. It is entirely of bronze, weighing 20,000 pounds, and was designed by Randolph Rogers, an American artist. The casting was executed at Munich in 1861. The door is 17 feet in height by 9 feet in width. It contains 8 panels with reliefs exhibiting scenes in the life of Columbus.

Bronze Gates [of Ghiberti]. Famous gates of bronze in the Baptistery of St. John at Florence, Italy, executed from designs furnished by Lorenzo Ghiberti (1378– 1455?), the greatest sculptor of his time. These gates represent scenes from the New Testament. Ghiberti is said to have spent more than 20 years on these bronze gates, which were pronounced by Michael Angelo worthy to be the Gates of Paradise.

Bronze Horses. Four celebrated figures of horses, in bronze, which were brought by the Venetians from Constantinople, and which now stand over the vestibule of the Cathedral of St. Mark, in Venice, Italy.

He [the doge Dandolo] went to die; But of his trophies four arrived ere long, Snatched from destruction, the four steeds divine,

That strike the ground, resounding with their feet,

And from their nostrils snort ethereal flame

Over that very porch.

Rogers.

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