Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 10.djvu/797

Rh GONZALO DE BERCEO, mystic and didactic poet, and one of the earliest names in Castilian literature, was parish priest at Berceo, near San Domingo de la Calzada, in the province of Burgos, and lived, it is believed, during the ﬁrst sixty of the. His works, which are reprinted in the Poesias Castellanas Anteriores al Siglo XV. of Sanchez, amount to upwards of 13,000 lines of verse, chiefly in rhymed quatrains. The subjects chosen for treatment are the Lives of San Domingo de Silos, Santa Oria, and San Millan ; the Sacriﬁce of the Mass; the Miracles, Glories, and Pains of the Blessed Virgin; the Signs of the Day of Judgment; and the Martyrdom of San Lorenzo. Apart from the interest which attaches to them in the eyes of the literary and ecclesiastical archaeologist, they have little to attract the modern reader. The monotony of their “ sermo pedestris” is but seldom relieved by any touches of poetical genius; in some places, however, as T icknor remarks, there is a simple-hearted piety that is very attractive, and in others a power in story-telling that is very striking. The poem on the Miracles of the Virgin, which is the largest, is also the most curious; but that upon the Signs of the Last Day is often very solemn, while the Mourning of Mary at the Cross breathes such a childlike spirit of gentle, faithful, credulous devotion as enables one to realize with some vividness many of the best characteristiCs of the religious life of the time.

1em  GONZALO FERNANDEZ Y AGUILAR (–), commonly known as Gonsalvo de Cordova, El Gran Capitan (“The Great Captain ”), was born at Montilla on the 16th of March, and in his ﬁfteenth year was presented to Queen Isabella at Segovia, where his manly beauty, his graceful manners, and his soldierly accomplishments speedily made him conspicuous in the court. He first saw active military service in Portugal under Alonzo de Cardenas, and gained special praise for his conduct on the battleﬁeld of Albuera in. In the protracted Moorish war begun in, he served with distinction in various capacities, and was ﬁnally employed to conduct the peace negotiations with Abdallah. For his efﬁcient services in this business he was rewarded with a pension and a grant out of the conquered territory. When, in consequence of the advance of Charles VIII. into Italy, a Spanish expedition was decided upon in, Gonzalo was selected for the chief command ; and although at Seminara near Reggie, through the interference of the friendly Ferdi- nand of Naples, he lost the battle (it was the only occasion on which he ever was defeated), he gained in reputation both for prudence and for bravery. In spite of his subsequent suc- cesses in Lower Calabria, the campaign of this year closed with indecisive results ; but in the opening of the following season, he still further increased his fame by his brilliant surprise and capture of Laino, and by his junction with the Neapolitan forces before Atella, after an arduous march through hostile territory. It is most commonly, and with most probability, said to have been on this occasion that he received the honourable title of El Gran Capitan, by which the Spaniards still delight to designate him. The conquest of Calabria having been thus rapidly achieved, he, at the pope’s invitation, proceeded to clear Ostia of the French garrison by which it had been held, and shortly afterwards entered Rome itself, where he was greeted by the populace as “deliverer of the city.” The object of his expedition, the total expulsion of the French from Neapolitan territory, having been fully attained, he, in August, returned to Spain, where he was reCeived with the utmost enthusiasm by all classes, the king publicly declaring that the reduction of Naples, and the humiliation inﬂicted on the French, reﬂected more lustre on his crown than the conquest of Granada. After having, early in, efficiently cooperated with Tendilla in putting down the Moorish insurrection in the Alpujarras, Gonzalo, in May of the , took command of an armada designed to operate on the coast of Sicily and in the Levant, and generally to uphold the inﬂuence of Spain. In conjunction with the Venetian admiral he stormed St George in Cephalonia, in January ,° and soon afterwards returning to Sicily, commenced operations against Frederick in accordance with the treaty concluded between France and Spain for the partition of Naples. The whole of Calabria was occupied in less than a month, with the exception of Tarento, which did not surrender until March. On the outbreak of hostilities between France and Spain in July of the, Gonzalo was compelled to fall back upon Barlctta, whence, after having sustained a memorable siege of nearly ten months, he sallied in April, and coming upon the French troops at Cerignola, inﬂicted on them a disastrous defeat, which at once made him master of the city of Naples and of the greater part of the kingdom. A subsequent victory at the bridge of Garigliano (29th December ) gave him Gaeta, and terminated the war. For more than three he continued to act with popularity and efﬁciency at Naples as F erdinand’s viceroy ; but the jealousy and distrust of that somewhat narrow-minded monarch led to his recall in, and to his subsequent retirement from court shortly afterwards. The remainder of his days were passed on his estate at Loja, where, in the midst of preparations for a voyage to Flanders, he was seized with a fever, of which he died, 2d December.

1em  GOOD, (1764–1827), a writer on medical, religious, and classical subjects, was born May 25, 1764, at Epping, Essex, where his father, the Rev. Peter Good, was Independent minister. After receiving his education in the seminary conducted by his father, he was, at about the age of ﬁfteen, apprenticed to a surgeon—apothecary at Gosport. In 1783 he went to London to prosecute his medical studies, and in the autumn of 1784 he commenced practice as a surgeon at Sudbury in Suffolk. Through an obligation rendered to a friend he, in 1792, got into pecuniary embar- rassment, and, with a view to surmount his difﬁculties, he removed in 1793 to London, where he entered into part— nership with a surgeon and apothecary who enjoyed an extensive practice. In November of the same year he was admitted a member of the college of surgeons. On account of disagreements with his colleague, the partnership was soon afterwards dissolved, and to increase his income he now devoted more of his attention to literary pursuits. Besides contributing both in prose and poetry to the Ana- lytical and Critical Reviews, and the British and JIont/zly JIaIr/azines, and other periodicals, he is the author of a large number of works relating chieﬂy to medical and religious subjects. In 1794 he became a member of the British Pharmaceutical Society, and in that coanexion, and especi- ally by the publication of his work, A History of Illedicine, he did much to effect a greatly needed reform in the profession of the apothecary. In 1820 he took the diploma of M.D. at Marischal College, Aberdeen. He died, January 2, 1827. Dr Good was not only well versed in classical