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Washington Allston

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ALLSTON, WASHINGTON American his torical painter and poet, was born Nov. 5, 1779, at Waccamaw (S. C.) , where his father was a planter. He graduated at Harvard in 1800, and for a short time pursued his artistic studies at Charleston with Edward Greene Malbone (1 7 7 7-1807) , the miniature painter, and Charles Fraser (1782-186o). With the former, in 18o r, he went to London, and entered the Royal Academy as a student of Benjamin West, with whom he formed a lifelong friendship. In 1804 he went to Paris, and, after a few months' residence there, to Rome, where he spent the greater part of the next four years. During this period he became inti mate with Coleridge and Thorwaldsen. From 1809 to 1811 he resided in his native country, and from 181 1 to 1817 he painted in England. After visiting Paris a second time, he returned to the United States, and practised his profession at Boston (1818-3o), and afterwards at Cambridge (Mass.) , where he died July 9, 1843. He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1819. In colour and the management of light and shade Allston closely imitated the Venetia, school, and he has hence been styled the "American Titian." Many of his pictures have biblical subjects, and Allston himself had a profoundly religious nature. His first considerable panting, "The Dead Man Revived," executed shortly after his second visit to England, and now at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, gained a prize of 200 guineas. In England he also painted his "St. Peter Liberated by the Angel," the remarkable canvas, "Uriel in the Sun," "Jacob's Dream" (at Petworth) and "Elijah in the Wilderness." To the period of his residence in America belong "The Prophet Jere miah" (at Yale), "Saul and the Witch of Endor," "Miriam," "Beatrice," "Rosalie," "Spalatro's Vision of the Bloody Hand," and the vast but unfinished "Belshazzar's Feast" (in the Boston Athenaeum), at which he was working at the time of his death. As a writer, Allston shows great facility of expression and imagi native power. Coleridge (a portrait of whom by Allston is in the National Portrait Gallery) said of him that he was surpassed by no man of his age in artistic and poetic genius. His literary works are—The Sylphs of the Seasons and other Poems (1813) , where he displays true sympathy with nature and deep knowledge of the human heart; Monaldi (1841), a tragical romance, the scene of which is laid in Italy; and Lectures on Art, edited by his brother-in-law, R. H. Dana the novelist (185o).

See J. B. Flagg's Life and Letters of Washington Allston (1892).

"ALL THE TALENTS," MINISTRY OF, the name given to the coalition government which came into office after the death of Pitt (Jan. 23, 18o6). Lord Grenville was at the head of the ministry, which included Fox and Lord Sidmouth. Fox died on Sept. 13 ; and after a disastrous year in which Napoleon reached the summit of his power, Grenville resigned (March 18, 1807) rather than agree to George III.'s unconstitutional de mand that the ministers should undertake never again to ap proach him on the subject of concessions to Roman Catholics. It was due to the Ministry of all the Talents that the bill for the abolition of the slave trade was passed on March 25, 1807.

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