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| Character Sketches Of Romance, Fiction & The Drama (vol1) |
| By Anonymous |
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-AA'RON, a Moor, beloved by Tam'ora, queen of the Goths, in the tragedy of _Titus Andron'icus_, published among the plays of Shakespeare (1593)....
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CHARACTER SKETCHES OF ROMANCE, FICTION, AND THE DRAMA.
AA'RON, a Moor, beloved by Tam'ora, queen of the Goths, in the tragedy of _Titus Andron'icus_, published among the plays of Shakespeare (1593).
(The classic name is _Andronicus_, but the character of this play is purely fictitious.)
_Aaron (St.) a British martyr of the City of Legions (_Newport_, in South Wales ). He was torn limb from limb by order of Maximian'us Hercu'lius, general in , of the army of Diocle'tian. Two churches were founded in the City of Legions, one in honor of St. Aaron and one in honor of his fellow-martyr, St. Julius.Newport wascalled Caerleon by the British.
... two others ... sealed their doctrine with their blood;
St. Julius, and with him St. Aaron, have their room
At Carleon, suffering death by Diocletian's doom. Drayton, _Polyolbion_, xxiv, (1622).
AAZ'IZ (3 _syl._), so the queen of or Saba is sometimes called; but in the Koran she is called Balkis (ch. xxvii.).
ABAD'DON, an angel of the bottomless pit (_Rev_. ix. 11). The word is derived from the Hebrew, _abad_, "lost," and means _the lost one_. There are two other angels introduced by Klopstock in _The Messiah_ with similar names, but must not be confounded with the angel referred to in _Rev_.; one is Obaddon, the angel of death, and the other
Abbad'ona, the repentant devil.
AB'ARIS, to whom Apollo gave a golden arrow, on which to ride through the air.--See _Dictionary of Phrase and Fable_.
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