Thomas Delf, in his translation of Chevreuil's Principles of Harmony, 
etc., of Colors (1847), signs himself "Charles Martel." 
=Martext= (Sir Oliver), a vicar in Shakespeare's comedy of As You Like 
It (1600). 
=Martha:= 
"Yea, Lord! Yet man must earn And woman bake the bread; And some 
must watch and wake Early for other's sake Who pray instead." 
Julia C. R. Dorr, Afternoon Songs (1885). 
Martha, sister to "The Scornful Lady" (no name given).--Beaumont and 
Fletcher, The Scornful Lady (1616). 
Martha, the servant-girl at Shaw's Castle.--Sir W. Scott, St. Ronan's 
Well (time, George III.). 
Martha, the old housekeeper at Osbaldistone Hall.--Sir W. Scott, Rob 
Roy (time, George I.). 
Martha, daughter of Ralph and Louise de Lascours, and sister of Diana 
de Lascours. When the crew of the Urania rebelled, Martha, with 
Ralph de Lascours (the captain), Louise de Lascours, and Barabas, 
were put adrift in a boat, and cast on an iceberg in "the Frozen Sea." 
The iceberg broke, Ralph and Louise were drowned, Barabas was 
picked up by a vessel, and Martha fell into the hands of an Indian tribe, 
who gave her the name of Orgari´ta ("withered corn"). She married 
Carlos, but as he married under a false name, the marriage was illegal, 
and when Carlos was given up to the hands of justice, Orgarita was
placed under the charge of her grandmother, Mde. de Théringe, and 
[probably] espoused Horace de Brienne.--E. Stirling, The Orphan of the 
Frozen Sea (1856). 
Martha, a friend of Margaret. She makes love to Mephistophelês, with 
great worldly shrewdness.--Goethe, Faust (1798). 
Martha, alias ULRICA, mother of Bertha, who is betrothed to 
Hereward and marries him.--Sir W. Scott, Count Robert of Paris (time, 
Rufus). 
Martha (The Abbess), abbess of Elcho Nunnery. She is a kinswoman of 
the Glover family.--Sir W. Scott, Fair Maid of Perth (time, Henry IV.). 
Martha (Dame), housekeeper to major Bridgenorth.--Sir W. Scott, 
Peveril of the Peak (time, Charles II.). 
=Martha Hilton=, serving-maid in the household of the widowed 
Governor Wentworth, until, on his sixtieth birthday, he surprised the 
guests assembled to do him honor by wedding her in their sight.--Henry 
Wadsworth Longfellow, Lady Wentworth. 
=Marthé=, a young orphan, in love with Frédéric Auvray, a young artist 
who loves her in return, but leaves her, goes to Rome, and falls in love 
with another lady, Elena, sister of the Duke Strozzi. Marthé leaves the 
Swiss pastor, who is her guardian, and travels in midwinter to Rome, 
dressed as a boy, and under the name of Piccolino. She tells her tale to 
Elena, who abandons the fickle, false one, and Frédéric forbids the 
Swiss wanderer ever again to approach him. Marthé, in despair, throws 
herself into the Tiber, but is rescued. Frédéric repents, is reconciled, 
and marries the forlorn maiden.--Mons. Guiraud, Piccolino (an opera, 
1875). 
=Marthon=, an old cook at Arnheim Castle.--Sir W. Scott, Anne of 
Geierstein (time, Edward IV.). 
Marthon, alias RIZPAH, a Bohemian woman, attendant on the 
Countess Hameline of Croye.--Sir W. Scott, Quentin Durward (time,
Edward IV.). 
=Martian Laws= (not Mercian as Wharton gives it in his Law 
Dictionary) are the laws collected by Martia, the wife of Guithelin, 
great grand-son of Mulmutius, who established in Britain the 
"Mulmutian Laws" (q.v.). Alfred translated both these codes into 
Saxon-English, and called the Martian code Pa Marchitle Lage. These 
laws have no connection with the kingdom of Mercia.--Geoffrey, 
British History, iii. 13 (1142). 
Guynteline, ... whose queen, ... to show her upright mind, To wise 
Mulmutius' laws her Martian first did frame. 
Drayton, Polyolbion, viii. (1612). 
=Martigny= (Marie le comptesse de), wife of the earl of 
Etherington.--Sir W. Scott, St. Ronan's Well (time, George III.). 
=Martin=, in Swift's Tale of the Tub, is Martin Luther; "John" is Calvin; 
and "Peter" the pope of Rome (1704). 
In Dryden's Hind and Panther, "Martin" means the Lutheran party 
(1687). 
Martin, the old verdurer near Sir Henry Lee's lodge.--Sir W. Scott, 
Woodstock (time, Commonwealth). 
Martin, the old shepherd in the service of the lady of Avenel.--Sir W. 
Scott, The Monastery (time, Elizabeth). 
Martin, the ape in the beast-epic of Reynard the Fox (1498). 
Martin (Dame), partner of Darsie Latimer at the fishers' dance.--Sir W. 
Scott, Redgauntlet (time, George III.). 
Martin (Sarah), the prison reformer of Great Yarmouth. This young 
woman, though but a poor dressmaker, conceived a device for the 
reformation of prisoners in her native town, and continued for 
twenty-four years her earnest and useful labor of love, acting as
schoolmistress, chaplain and industrial superintendent. In 1835, 
Captain Williams, inspector of prisons, brought her plans before the 
Government, under the conviction that the nation at large might be 
benefitted by their practical good sense (1791-1843). 
=Martin Weldeck=, the miner. His story is read by Lovel to a picnic 
party at St. Ruth's ruins.--Sir W. Scott, The Antiquary (time, George 
III.). 
=Martine= (3 syl.), wife of Sganarelle. She has    
    
		
	
	
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