Thomas Carlyle

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Standard Name: Carlyle, Thomas

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Jane Welsh Carlyle
The Collected Poems of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle were published, edited by Rodger L. Tarr and Fleming McClelland.
Bloom, Abigail Burnham, editor. Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers. Greenwood Press.
107
Textual Production Elizabeth Gaskell
Her first epigraph, from Thomas Carlyle 's essay Biography, counters the view of novelists and their work as foolish.
Textual Production Anna Swanwick
These first translations by AS had several consequences. They were snapped up by Henry Bohn for his Bohn's Standard Library edition of Goethe's works (which was designed to take advantage of the interest sparked by...
Textual Features Geraldine Jewsbury
In To-day, the first of these articles, she describes what she sees as a pervasive feeling of discontent in English society and argues that there is no room in the old faiths for the...
Textual Features Hannah Cullwick
According to Liz Stanley , the extent of minutiae, repetition, and corresponding lack of emotional or psychological recording or retrospective analysis in the diaries' accounts of HC 's daily work is a result of their...
Textual Features Harriet Taylor
The book contains various drafts of her unpublished essays and a few of her poems, as well as letters exchanged with John Taylor , John Stuart Mill , Jane Welsh and Thomas Carlyle , and Helen Taylor .
Textual Features Jane Welsh Carlyle
Jane then evaluates her current beaus by Rousseau's standards. Thomas Carlyle , whom she has just recently met, is something liker to St Preux than George Craig is to Wolmar. He has his talents, his...
Textual Features Mathilde Blind
Blind celebrates Eliot's intellectual as well as her literary eminence. She gives her introductory chapter to issues of gender, referring back to Eliot's 1854 essay on this topic, Woman in France: Madame de Sablé....
Textual Features Jane Welsh Carlyle
Bliss hoped that her edition would allow JWC to write her own story.
Carlyle, Jane Welsh. “Editorial Materials”. Jane Welsh Carlyle: A New Selection of Her Letters, edited by Trudy Bliss, Victor Gollancz, p. various pages.
11
Her chronologically-organised collection includes letters from 1821 through 1866 and incorporates lengthy explanations by Bliss and occasional annotations by Thomas Carlyle
Textual Features Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde
Her essay The Poet as Teacher calls for universal education on the grounds that it is ignorance that degrades, not poverty or toil.
Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde,. Social Studies. Ward and Downey.
274
Poetry, she imagines, could become a great educational tool, especially for...
Residence Jane Welsh Carlyle
Thomas Carlyle decided that he and his wife should move to London.
Surtees, Virginia. Jane Welsh Carlyle. Michael Russell.
109-10
Residence Jane Welsh Carlyle
Jane and Thomas Carlyle moved to 5 Cheyne Row, Chelsea, where they lived for the rest of their lives.
Surtees, Virginia. Jane Welsh Carlyle. Michael Russell.
111, 114
Residence Adelaide Procter
AP lived with her family at various addresses around London. Initially they lived with her mother's mother, Anne Benson Skepper , and mother's stepfather, Basil Montagu , in a lively establishment described by Thomas Carlyle
Residence Jane Welsh Carlyle
Jane and Thomas Carlyle moved to the family farm at Craigenputtoch, in Dumfriesshire.
Thesing, William B., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 55. Gale Research.
55: 42
Residence Jane Welsh Carlyle
Thomas Carlyle travelled to London in an effort to have his Sartor Resartus published; Jane followed in late September.
Surtees, Virginia. Jane Welsh Carlyle. Michael Russell.
89-91, 97

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