Meredith, George (b. 1828)

Meredith, George, poet and novelist, born in Hampshire; began his literary career 1851 as a poet, in which capacity he has since distinguished himself and given expression to his deepest personal convictions, but it is chiefly as a novelist he is most widely known and is generally judged of; as a novel-writer he occupies a supreme place, and is reckoned superior in that department to all his contemporaries in the same line by the unanimous consent of one and all of them; his novels, however, appeal only to a select few, but by them they are regarded with unbounded admiration, some giving preference to this and others to that of the series; “The Ordeal of Richard Feveril,” published in 1859, is by many considered his best, though it is over “The Egoist” that Louis Stevenson breaks out into raptures; Meredith has most sympathetic insights into nature and life, has a marvellous power in analysing and construing character, and shows himself alive to all the great immediate interests of humanity; (b. 1828).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Mer-de-glace * Meredith, Owen
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Mentor
Menzel, Adolf
Menzel, Wolfgang
Mephistopheles
Mercator
Mercenaries
Mercia
Mercury
Mercury
Mer-de-glace
Meredith, George
Meredith, Owen
Mergui
Meridian
Mèrimèe, Prosper
Merio`neth
Merivale, Charles
Merle d'Aubigné, Jean-Henri
Merlin
Mermaids
Merovingians