[Clement], French critic, born at Dijon, surnamed by Voltaire from his severity the "Inclement" (1742-1812).

[Clement], a French manufacturer and savant, born near Dijon; author of a memoir on the specific heat of the gases (1779-1841).

[Clement, Jacques], a Dominican monk; assassinated Henry III. of France in 1589.

[Clement, St.], St. Paul's coadjutor, the patron saint of tanners; his symbol an anchor.

[Clementi, Muzio], a musical composer, especially of pieces for the pianoforte, born in Rome; was the father of pianoforte music; one of the foremost pianists of his day; was buried in Westminster (1752-1832).

[Clementine, the Lady], a lady, accomplished and beautiful, in Richardson's novel, "Sir Charles Grandison," in love with Sir Charles, who marries another he has no partiality for.

[Cleobulus], one of the seven sages of Greece; friend of Plato; wrote lyrics and riddles in verse, 530 B.C.

[Cleom`brotus], a philosopher of Epirus, so fascinated with Plato's "Phædon" that he leapt into the sea in the expectation that he would thereby exchange this life for a better.

[Cleome`des], a Greek astronomer of the 1st or 2nd century; author of a treatise which regards the sun as the centre of the solar system and the earth as a globe.

[Cleomenes], the name of three Spartan kings.