Page:The American Cyclopædia (1879) Volume VI.djvu/146

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138 DISRAELI His father removed to England in 1748 from Venice, whither his Hebrew ancestors had fled in the loth century from the inquisition in Spain. In Venice they assumed the name of Disraeli (originally written D'Israeli), " a name never home before or since by any other fam- ily, that their race might be for ever recog- ni7A'd." Isaac was an only son, and was in- tended for the pursuits of commerce, by which his father had attained to fortune. The latter

a> >criously alarmed when his son during his 

school days produced a poem ; "the loss of one of his argosies uninsured could not have filled him with more blank dismay." He was sent to a college at Amsterdam, where he studied the philosophical works in fashion at the time, and when 18 years of age returned to England a disciple of Rousseau. When in- formed that a place in the establishment of a givut merchant was prepared for him, he re- plied that he had written and intended to pub- lish a poem of considerable length against com- merce, which was the corrupter of man. Pen- sive and sensitive, fond of solitude and the society of books, he found no literary friend and counsellor, and was sent by his parents to travel in France, with the hope that adventures and change of scene might divert him from the eccentricity of his course. He lived in Paris, associating with learned men and frequenting libraries, till 1788. On his return he published anonymously in 1789 a satire " On the Abuse of Satire," in polished verses, which was di- rected against Peter Pindar, then in the height of his popularity. This venture obtained for him the friendship of Mr. Pye, afterward poet l.-iuivate, through whose influence the elder Disraeli was persuaded to renounce the effort to convert a poet into a merchant, and was finally induced to furnish means sufficient to enable his son to gratify his passion for book- collecting and for tranquil study. The son now wrote some metrical pieces for the maga- zines, and in 1790 " A Defence of Poetry," of which he afterward burned all the copies he could obtain. In 1791 he published the first, and in 1793 the second volume of his " Curi- osities of Literature," a product of curious erudition, abounding in discursive and anec- dotical criticisms. A new edition of both volumes appeared in 1794. This was followed by " Miscellanies, or Literary Recreations " (1796) ; " Vaurien, or Sketches of the Times, a Philosophical Novel" (2 vols., 1797); "Ro- mances," a volume of prose tales (1799) ; " Nar- rative Poems" (1803); "Flim-Flams, or the Life and Errors of my Uncle, and the Amours of my Aunt " (:{ rob., 1805) ; and "Despotism, or the Fall of the Jesuits," a novel ( 2 vols., 1811). In 1812 appeared his " Calamities of Authors, including some Inquiries respecting thi-ir Mural and Literary Character;" in 1814, "Quarrels of Authors, or some Memoirs for our Literary History, including Specimens of Controversy to the Reign of Elizabeth ;" and in 1816, the most finished of his compositions, DISSEISIN " Illustrations of the Literary Character, or the History of Men of Genius, drawn from their own Feelings and Confessions." All of these works are amusing arid anecdotical, and reveal the author not only as a literary anti- quary, but as a man of humor, thoughtiiilness, and elegant tastes. His " Curiosities of Liter- ature " had reached the fifth edition, when in 1817 he added a new volume, containing more elaborate essays than the preceding ; and the success of the publication was such that he rapidly produced three additional volumes. He was five years in the composition of his work on the "Life and Reign of Charles L," which appeared in 1828-'31, and gained for him the degree of D. C. L. from Oxford. He had long meditated a history of English literature, for which all his previous writings had been preparatory ; but in 1839 a paralysis of the optic nerve prevented him from pursuing his re- searches, and a selection from his numerous manuscripts was given to the public in 1841 under the title of " Amenities of Literature." During the latter part of his life he resided on his manor of Bradenham, Buckinghamshire. " He was," says his son, " a complete literary character, a man who really passed his life in his library. Even marriage produced no change in these habits ; he rose to enter the chamber where he lived alone with his books, and at night his lamp was ever lit within the samo walls. In London his only amusement was ramble among booksellers ; in the country h< scarcely ever left his room but to saunter ii abstraction upon a terrace, muse over a chaj ter, or coin a sentence." A new edition of his works, edited and annotated with a memoir by his son, Benjamin Disraeli, was published in London in 1850, and republished in New York in 9 vols. DISSEISIN, a term used in the English law to express the turning a man out of possession of a freehold estate in lands, that is to say, an estate in fee or for life. It is not applied to dispossession of a term of years, nor is it strict- ly applicable to an incorporal estate, inasmuch as that species of estate does not admit of actual possession in a literal sense ; yet con- structively there may be disseisin of incorporal rights, as an office, rent, and the like. Ac- cording to the old common law, disseisin al- ways imported a wrongful putting of another out of possession. An entry by a stranger after the death of the owner of a freehold, and before the heir or devisee had taken possession, was called an abatement; an entry after the determination of a particular estate, before the person entitled to the reversion or remainder, was an intrusion ; an alienation by a tenant for life for a longer term than he was entitled to convey was a discontinuance ; and diflx-rent remedies were necessary for the recovery of the possession while the old forms of real actions were in use. As disseisin commenced by a wrongful act of the disseizor, the person disseized could repossess himself by an entry