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LYSANIAS. See Abilene.

LYTE, HENRY FRANCIS: British hymn-writer; b. at Ednam (3 m. n.n.e. of Kelso), Roxburghahire, Scotland, June 1, 1793; d. at Nice, France, Nov. 20, 1847. He was educated in Ireland, first at the royal school of Enniskillen, then at Trinity College, Dublin, where he was graduated in 1814. He took orders in 1815, and, after holding curacies at Taghmon (near Wexford), Marzion (Cornwall), and Lymington (Hampshire)

entered upon the papstj]al CUpQey ef Lower Bri."_ ham, Devonshire, in 1823. This appointment he held till his death. Lyte's hyenas were published and partly in Poems, chiefly Iteligiotsls (London, 1833), partly in The Spirit of the Paalrny (1834). Many of them are in common use. His " Abide with me, fast falls the eventide " is generally re garded as one of the few fine hymns in the lan guage. Other well-known hymns by Lyte are, heavenly courts above," "Far from my ยป tc Y home , God of mercy, God of grace,'. "Praise, my soul the 8 ing of heaven," and " Jesus,

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I my cross have taken." Lyte also published Tales in Verse (London, 1826), and an appreciative Memoir of Henry Vaughan, prefixed to Vaughan's Sacred Poems (London, 1847). His daughter edited his Remains (1850), which consists of poems, sermons, and letters. The poems in this volume were reprinted in Lyte's Miscellaneous Poems (1868).

Bibliography: Besides the Memoir in the Remains, consult: J. Miller, Singers and Songs of the Church, pp. 431-433, London, 1889; Julian, Hymnology, pp. 706-707.

LYTTELTON, GEORGE, first BARON LYTTELTON: English author and statesman; b. at Hagley (6 m. n.e. of Kidderminster), Worcestershire, Jan. 17, 1709; d. there Aug. 22, 1773. He studied at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, but took no degree. He entered parliament in 1735 as member for Okehampton, Devonshire, and continued to represent this borough till 1756, when he was elevated to the peerage. He was lord commissioner of the treasury 1744-54, and chancellor of the exchequer 1755-56. Though he was a good debater, he became prominent in parliament chiefly because of his influential political connection. With Lord Cobham, his uncle, William Pitt, a relation by affinity, and the Grenvilles, his first cousins, Lyttelton formed the powerful political clique known at first as the "Cobhamites," then, after Lord Cobham's death, as the "Grenville Cousins." He was a liberal patron of literature and enjoyed the friendship of Pope, Thomson, Shenstone, Fielding, and others. His principal works are, Observations on .the Conversion and Apostleship of St. Paul (London, 1747; new ed., 1879), which Dr. Johnson characterized as "a treatise to which infidelity has never bin able to fabricate a special answer"; Dialogues of the Dead (1760; 4th ed., enlarged, 1765; new ed., 1889); and The History of the Life of Henry II. (4 vols., .1767; 3d ed., 6 vols., 1769-73), a work of much careful research, which has, however, been superseded. His verse, which is inferior to his prose, was chiefly included in Poems (Glasgow, 1773), and in his Poetical Works (London, 1785). His nephew, G. E. Ayscough, collected his Works (London, 1774; 3d. ed., 3 vols., 1776), including both verse and prose. Sir Robert Phillimore edited his Memoirs and Correspondence (2 vols., 1845).

Bibliography: An excellent list of authorities is given at the end of the sketch in DNB xxxiv. 369-374, and a Life is found in A. Chalmers, Works of the English Poets, vol. xiv., London, 1810. Consult also: E. S. Creasy, Memoirs of Celebrated Etonians, ib. 1876; and the works on the history of the times.

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