Mme. Tallien.
The Goddess of Reason. (Aug. 10, 1793.) The Goddess of Reason was enthroned by
the French Convention at the suggestion of Chaumette; and the cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris was
desecrated for the purpose. The wife of Momoro the printer was the best of these goddesses. The procession
was attended by the municipal officers and national guards, while troops of ballet girls carried torches
of truth. Incredible as it may seem, Gobet (the Archbishop of Paris), and nearly all the clergy stripped
themselves of their canonicals, and, wearing red nightcaps, joined in this blasphemous mockery. So did
Julien of Toulouse, a Calvinistic minister.
Mrs. Momoro, it is admitted, made one of the best goddesses of Reason, though her teeth were a little
defective.- Carlyle: French Revolution, vol. iii. book v. 4.
Libitina The goddess who, at Rome, presided
over funerals.
Omnis moriar; nullaque pars met vitabit Libitinam.
Libra [the balance ]. One of the twelve signs of the
Zodiac (September 22 to October 22), when day and night being weighed would be found equal. Library One of the most approved materials for writing on, before the invention of paper, was the thin
rind between the solid wood and the outside bark of certain trees. This substance is in Latin called liber,
which came in time to signify also a book. Hence our library, the place for books; librarian, the keeper
of books; and the French livre, a book.
Some interesting facts concerning books and libraries will be
found in Disraeli's Curiosities of Literature.
A circulating library. A library from which the books may be
borrowed and taken by readers to their homes under certain restrictions.
A living or walking library. Longinus,
the philosopher and rhetorician, was so called. (213-273.)
Public Libraries.
Ancient. The first public
library known was founded at Athens (B.C. 540) by Pisistratos. That of Alexandria, founded (B.C. 47)
by the Ptolemies, contained 400,000 books. It was burnt by order of the Calif Omar, A.D. 641.
The first
public library of Rome was founded by Asinus Pollio; the second, called the Palatine, by Augustus.
The
royal library of the Fatimites of Egypt contained 100,000 manuscripts, splendidly bound. (Gibbon.)
The
library of the Ommiades of Spain contained 600,000 volumes, 44 of which were catalogues. (Gibbon.)
There
were seventy public libraries in the kingdom of Andalusia. (Gibbon.)
When the monastery of Croydon
was burnt, in 1091, its library consisted of 900 volumes, 300 of which were very large. (Ingulphus.)
Modern. The British Museum library contains above 32 miles of book-shelves, 1,250,000 volumes, and
89,000 MSS. Some 40,000 additions are made yearly.
The Bibliothèque Nationale of Paris, founded by
Louis XIV., is the largest library in the world. It contains above 1,400,000 volumes, 500,000 pamphlets,
175,000 manuscripts, 300,000 maps and charts, 150,000 coins and medals, 1,400,000 engravings, contained
in 10,000 volumes, and 100,000 portraits.
The Impériale, France, contains about 600,000 books, 500,000
pamphlets, and 85,000 manuscripts.
The Munich Library contains about 600,000 books and 10,000 manuscripts.
The
Vienna, about 500,000 books and 20,000 manuscripts.
The Vatican, about 200,000 books and 40,000
manuscripts.
The Imperial Library of Russia, about 650,000 books and 21,000 manuscripts.
The Copenhagen
Library, about 500,000 books and 15,000 manuscripts.
Libya Africa, or all the north of Africa between Egypt and the Atlantic Ocean. It was the Greek name for
Africa in general. The Romans used the word sometimes as synonymous with Africa, and sometimes
for the fringe containing Carthage.
Licentiate (4 syl.) One who has a licence to practise some art or faculty, as a licentiate of medicine.
Lich A dead body. (Anglo-Saxon, lic; German, leiche.)
Lich-field, in Staffordshire. The field of the
dead, i.e. of the martyred Christians.
Lich-fowls. Birds that feed on carrion, as night-ravens, etc.
Lich-
gate. The shed or covered place at the entrance of churchyards, intended to afford shelter to the coffin
and mourners, while they wait for the clergyman to conduct the cortège into the church.
Lich-owl. The
screech-owl, superstitiously supposed to foretell death.
Lich-wake or Lyke-wake. The funeral feast or
the waking of a corpse, i.e. watching it all night.
Lich-way. The path by which a funeral is conveyed to
church, which not unfrequently deviates from the ordinary road. It was long supposed that wherever a
dead body passed became a public thoroughfare.