Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol. 1 eBook

Ebenezer Cobham Brewer
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 804 pages of information about Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol. 1.

Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol. 1 eBook

Ebenezer Cobham Brewer
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 804 pages of information about Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol. 1.

CARELESS HUSBAND (The), a comedy by Colley Cibber (1704).  The “careless husband” is sir Charles Easy, who has amours with different persons, but is so careless that he leaves his love-letters about, and even forgets to lock the door when he has made a liaison, so that his wife knows all; yet so sweet is her temper, and under such entire control, that she never reproaches him, nor shows the slightest indication of jealousy.  Her confidence so wins upon her husband that he confesses to her his faults, and reforms entirely the evil of his ways.

CAREME (Jean de), chef de cuisine of Leo X. This was a name given him by the pope for an admirable soupe maigre which he invented for Lent.  A descendant of Jean was chef to the prince regent, at a salary of L1000 per annum, but he left this situation because the prince had only a menage bourgeois, and entered the service of baron Rothschild at Paris (1784-1833).

CAREY, innocent-faced rich young dude in Ellen Olney Kirk’s novel, A Daughter of Eve (1889).

Carey (Patrick), the poet brother of lord Falkland, introduced by sir W. Scott in Woodstock (time, Commonwealth).

CAR’GILL (The Rev. Josiah), minister of St. Ronan’s Well, tutor of the hon.  Augustus Bidmore (2 syl.), and the suitor of Miss Augusta Bidmore, his pupil’s sister.—­Sir W. Scott, St. Ronan’s Well (time, George III.).

CARI’NO, father of Zeno’cia, the chaste troth-plight wife of Arnoldo (the lady dishonorably pursued by the governor count Clodio).—­Beaumont and Fletcher, The Custom of the Country (1647).

CAR’KER (James), manager in the house of Mr. Dombey, merchant.  Carker was a man of forty, of a florid complexion, with very glistening white teeth, which showed conspicuously when he spoke.  His smile was like “the snarl of a cat.”  He was the Alas’tor of the house of Dombey, for he not only brought the firm to bankruptcy, but he seduced Alice Marwood (cousin of Edith, Dombey’s second wife), and also induced Edith to elope with him.  Edith left the wretch at Dijon, and Carker, returning to England, was run over by a railway train and killed.

John Carker, the elder brother, a junior clerk in the same firm.  He twice robbed it and was forgiven.

Harriet Carker, a gentle, beautiful young woman, who married Mr. Morfin, one of the employes in the house of Mr. Dombey, merchant.  When her elder brother John fell into disgrace by robbing his employer, Harriet left the house of her brother James (the manager) to live with and cheer her disgraced brother John.—­C.  Dickens, Dombey and Son (1846).

CARLETON (Captain), an officer in the Guards.—­Sir W. Scott, Peveril of the Peak (time, Charles II.).

CARLISLE (Frederick Howard, earl of), uncle and guardian of lord Byron (1748-1826).  His tragedies are The Father’s Revenge and Bellamere.

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Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol. 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.