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MARK PATTISON (1813-1884)

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 937 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARK PATTISON (1813-1884)  ,
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English author and rector of Lincoln College, Oxford, was born on the loth of
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October 1813 . He was the son of the rector of Hauxwell,
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Yorkshire, and was privately educated by his
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father . In 1832 he matriculated at Oriel College, where he took his B.A. degree in 1836 with second-class honours . After other attempts to obtain a fellowship, he was elected in 1839 to a Yorkshire fellowship at Lincoln, an anti-Puseyite College . Pattison was at this time a Puseyite, and greatly under the influence of J . H . Newman, for whom he worked, helping in the
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translation of Thomas Aquinas's Catena Aurea, and writing in the
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British Critic and Christian
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Remembrancer . He was ordained priest in 1843, and in the same
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year became tutor of Lincoln College, where he rapidly made a reputation as a clear and stimulating teacher and as a sympathetic friend of youth . The management of the college was practically in his hands, and his reputation as a scholar became high in the university . In 1851 the rectorship of Lincoln became vacant, and it seemed certain that Pattison would be elected, but he lost it by a disagreeable intrigue . The disappointment was acute and his
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health suffered . In 1855 he resigned the tutorship,travelled in Germany to investigate
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Continental systems of
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education, and began his researches into the lives of Casaubon and
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Scaliger, which occupied the remainder of his
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life .

In 1861 he was elected rector of Lincoln, marrying in the same year

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Emilia Francis Strong (afterwards Lady Dilke) . The rector contributed largely to various reviews on
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literary subjects, and took a considerable
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interest in social science, even presiding over a section at a congress in 1876 . The routine of university business he avoided with contempt, and refused the
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vice-chancellorship . But while living the life of a student, he was fond of society, and especially of the society of
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women . He died at
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Harrogate on the 3oth of
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July 1884 . His biography of Isaac Casaubon appeared in 1875; Milton, in
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Macmillan's English Men of Letters series in 1879 . The 18th century, alike in its literature and its
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theology, was a favourite study, as is illustrated by his contribution (Tendencies of Religious Thought in England, 1688-175o) to the once famous Essays and Reviews (186o), and by his edition of Pope's Essay on Man (1869), &c . His Sermons and Collected Essays, edited by Henry Nettleship, were published posthumously (1889), as well as the
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Memoirs (1885), an auto-biography deeply tinged with melancholy and bitterness . His projected Life of Scaliger was never finished . Mark Pattison possessed an extraordinary distinction of mind . He was a true scholar, who lived entirely in the things of the intellect . He writes of himself, excusing the composition of his memoirs, that he has known little or nothing of contemporary celebrities, and that his memory is inaccurate: " All my energy was directed upon one end—to improve myself, to form my own mind, to sound things thoroughly, to
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free myself from the bondage of unreason .

. . If there is anything of interest in my

story, it is as a story of
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mental development " (Memoirs, pp . I, 2) . The Memoirs is a rather morbid
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book, and Mark Pattison is merciless to himself throughout . It is evident that he carried rationalism in religion to an extent that seems hardly consistent with his position as a priest of the English Church . Mark Pattison's tenth and youngest
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sister was Dorothy Wyndlow Pattison (1832-1878), better known as SISTER DORA, the name she took in 1864 on becoming a member of the
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Anglican sisterhood of the Good Samaritan at Coatham, Yorkshire . In 1865 she was sent as nurse to their cottage hospital in
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Walsall, and from 1867 to 1877 she was in charge of a new hospital there . She
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left the sisterhood in 1874, and their hospital in 1877, to take charge of the municipal epidemic hospital, where the cases were largely small-pox . She had meanwhile qualified herself thoroughly as a nurse and had acquired no mean skill as a surgeon . Her efforts greatly endeared her to those among whom she worked, and after her
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death a memorial window was erected in the parish church, and a marble portrait statue by F . J . Williamson in the
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principal square of Walsall .

See

Margaret Lonsdale's Sister Dora (1887 ed.) .

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