TULLY 
 
 
is introduced in full clerical tonsure, with 
the chaplet of white and red beads in his 
right hand, a corded girdle about his waist, 
and a russet robe of the Franciscan order. 
His stockings red, his girdle red, orna- 
mented with gold twist and a golden tassel. 
At his girdle hung a wallet for the recep- 
tion of provisions, for "Walleteers" had 
no other food but what they received firom 
begging.   Friar Tuck was chaplain to 
Robin Hood, the May-king. (See MoRnis- 
DANCE.) 
In this our spacious isle, I think there is not one 
But he hath heard some talk of Hood and Little 
    John; 
Of Tuck, the merry friar, which many a sermon 
    made, 
In praise of Robin Hood, his outlaws and their 
    trade. 
           Drayton, Polyolbion, xxvi. (1622). 
 
  Tud (Morqan), chief physician of King 
Arthur.-The    Mabinogion    (" Geraint," 
twelfth century). 
 
  Tug (Tom), the waterman, a straight- 
forward, honest young man, who loved 
Wilhelmi'na, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Bundle, and, when he won the waterman's 
badge in rowing, he won the consent of 
"the gardener's daughter" to become his 
loving and faithful wife.-C. Dibdin, The 
Waterman (1774). 
 
  Tukely, the lover of Sophia. As So- 
phia has a partiality for the Hon. Mr. Daf- 
fodil, "the male coquette," Tukely dresses 
in woman's clothes, makes an appoint- 
ment with Daffodil, and gets him to slander 
Sophia and other ladies, concealed among 
the trees. They thus hear his slanders, 
and, presenting themselves before him, 
laugh him to scorn.-Garrick, The Male 
Coquette (1758). 
 
  Tulk'inghorn (Mr.), attorney-at-law 
 
 
*and legal adviser of the Dedlocks. Very 
silent and perfectly self-contained, but, 
knowing Lady Dedlock's secret, he is like 
the sword of Dam'ocl~s over her head, and 
she lives in ceaseless dread of him.-C. 
Dickens, Bleak House (1852). 
 
  Tullia, wicked daughter of Servius 
Tullius, king of Rome. She conspired 
with her paramour to compass her father's 
death, and drove over his dead body on 
her way to greet her accomplice as king. 
 
  Tulliver (Mr.), honest, irascible miller, 
whose love for "the little wench," his 
daughter, is the gentlest feeling of his 
nature. His pride is hurt by financial 
disaster; he becomes a hireling of the 
man he hates; his fortunes are redeemed 
by his son, but he dies soon afterward. 
 
   Tulliver (Mrs.), a weak, garrulous wo- 
man, vain of her "Dodson blood." 
 
   Tulliver (Maggie), fine, upright, imagi- 
nativQ, affectionate girl, understood by 
few, and passionately loved by two men. 
She resists her love for her cousin's al- 
most betrothed, and suffers the loss of 
reputation patiently. Tom Tulliver, her 
brother, is the sternest of her censors. 
The two are drowned together in a river- 
flood.-George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss. 
 
  Tully, Marcus Tullius Cicero, the great 
Roman orator (B.C. 106-43). He was pro- 
scribed by Antony, one of the triumvirate, 
and his head and hands, being cut off, 
were nailed, by the orders of Antony, to 
the Rostra of Rome. 
  Ye fond adorers of departed fame, 
  Who warm at Scipio's worth or Tully's name. 
       Campbell, Pleasures of Hope, i. (1799). 
  The Judas who betrayed Tully to the 
                                   IV 
 
 
TUCK 
 
 
155