The Carlyle EncyclopediaMark Cumming Written by more than fifty international researchers in Victorian studies, The Carlyle Encyclopedia is the new standard, single-volume reference work on Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle. It offers concise but detailed accounts of central issues related to the Carlyles' lives and writings, and provides bibliographic citations that direct the reader's attention to a wide range of additional sources. It presents the lives and literary achievements of two remarkable individuals in the context of the rich and challenging Victorian age. The Carlyle Encyclopedia will interest a variety of readers who concern themselves with literature, social history, the history of ideas, Victorian culture, and Scottish studies. Mark Cumming teaches nineteenth-century literature at Memorial University in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 88
Page 20
... social betterment . Carlyle finally visited Arnold and his family at Rugby in May 1842 and accompanied him on a tour of the nearby battlefield of Naseby , the scene of Oliver Cromwell's victory over the roy- alists on 14 June 1645. The ...
... social betterment . Carlyle finally visited Arnold and his family at Rugby in May 1842 and accompanied him on a tour of the nearby battlefield of Naseby , the scene of Oliver Cromwell's victory over the roy- alists on 14 June 1645. The ...
Page 22
... Social . 2nd ed . London : John Murray , 1873 . Venables , George Stovin . " Carlyle in Society and at Home . " Fortnightly Review 39 ( May 1883 ) : 622-42 . ASHBURTON , LOUISA LADY ( Louisa Caroline Stewart Mackenzie , 1827- 1903 ) ...
... Social . 2nd ed . London : John Murray , 1873 . Venables , George Stovin . " Carlyle in Society and at Home . " Fortnightly Review 39 ( May 1883 ) : 622-42 . ASHBURTON , LOUISA LADY ( Louisa Caroline Stewart Mackenzie , 1827- 1903 ) ...
Page 25
... social and welcomes the rational religion of wonder . He endorses Froude's description of Carlyle as " a Calvinist without the theology " ( First Forty Years , 2 : 2 ) , which suggests that Carlyle maintained the religion of his mother ...
... social and welcomes the rational religion of wonder . He endorses Froude's description of Carlyle as " a Calvinist without the theology " ( First Forty Years , 2 : 2 ) , which suggests that Carlyle maintained the religion of his mother ...
Page 36
... social standing , won her a wide variety of friends , among them many lit- erary giants of her day . She was herself a minor literary figure , producing two novels , The State Prisoner in 1837 and The Forester in 1839 , a vol- ume of ...
... social standing , won her a wide variety of friends , among them many lit- erary giants of her day . She was herself a minor literary figure , producing two novels , The State Prisoner in 1837 and The Forester in 1839 , a vol- ume of ...
Page 44
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration Alexander Alexander Carlyle Allingham argued Ashburton became BIBLIOGRAPHY Carlyle biography British brother Buller Cambridge career Carlyle observed Carlyle wrote Charles Chartism Cheyne Row Coleridge Craigenputtoch criticism Cromwell death Dickens Diogenes Teufelsdröckh Disraeli Duffy early Edinburgh edition Edward England English essay Forster Fraser's Magazine Frederick French Revolution Friedrich Friedrich Schiller friendship Froude's German Literature Goethe Goethe's Harriet Henry hero Hunt Ireland Irish Irving James Anthony Froude Jane Welsh Carlyle Jane's Jeffrey Jewsbury John Sterling John Stuart Mill Lady later Latter-Day Pamphlets lectures Letters and Speeches literary living London Margaret Martineau Mazzini Milnes novel Occasional Discourse Oliver Cromwell's Letters Oxford Past and Present philosopher poems poet poetry political portrait praised published Ralph Waldo Emerson reform Reminiscences Review Richard Richard Monckton Milnes Sartor Resartus Schiller Scotland Scottish social society spiritual Tennyson Thomas Carlyle thought tion University Press Victorian vols William York young
Popular passages
Page 30 - Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth ? Declare, if thou hast understanding.