Thomas Carlyle: A History of His Life in London, 1834-1881Longmans, Green, and Company, 1884 |
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Página 3
... friends have been indiscreetly reserved , idle tales which sur- vive in tradition become stereotyped into facts . Thus the characters of many of our greatest men , as they stand in history , are left blackened by ground- less calumnies ...
... friends have been indiscreetly reserved , idle tales which sur- vive in tradition become stereotyped into facts . Thus the characters of many of our greatest men , as they stand in history , are left blackened by ground- less calumnies ...
Página 10
... friends ; and those few , fearful of the conse- quences , were shy of confessing themselves his dis- ciples . Month after month went by , and no opening presented itself of which he was able to avail himself . Molesworth founded a ...
... friends ; and those few , fearful of the conse- quences , were shy of confessing themselves his dis- ciples . Month after month went by , and no opening presented itself of which he was able to avail himself . Molesworth founded a ...
Página 18
... friend Edward Irving is dead — I am friendless here or as good as that . My book cannot get on , though I stick to it like a burr . Why should I say ' Peace , peace , ' where there is no peace ? May God grant me strength to do , or to ...
... friend Edward Irving is dead — I am friendless here or as good as that . My book cannot get on , though I stick to it like a burr . Why should I say ' Peace , peace , ' where there is no peace ? May God grant me strength to do , or to ...
Página 21
... only I can so much as complain . My true Annan- dalians would but in vain afflict themselves with my cares . Other heart there is none in the world that would even honestly do that . My friends here admit cheerfully that.
... only I can so much as complain . My true Annan- dalians would but in vain afflict themselves with my cares . Other heart there is none in the world that would even honestly do that . My friends here admit cheerfully that.
Página 22
... friends here admit cheerfully that I am a very heroic man , that must understand the art , unknown to them , of living upon nothing . Mill , I think , alone of them , would make any great effort to help me . As to hero- ism ( bless the ...
... friends here admit cheerfully that I am a very heroic man , that must understand the art , unknown to them , of living upon nothing . Mill , I think , alone of them , would make any great effort to help me . As to hero- ism ( bless the ...
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Addiscombe admired altogether Annandale beautiful believe blessing brother Buller called Carlyle's Charles Buller Chartism Chelsea Cheyne Row Chimæra Craigenputtock Cromwell Crown 8vo dear devil dinner Ecclefechan Edition England English eyes feel French Revolution friends God's gone Goody heart Heaven History hope Houndsditch humour idle Ireland Jane Welsh Carlyle John Carlyle John Sterling Journal kind knew Lady Harriet lectures letter literature live LL.D London look Lord Margaret Carlyle Mill morning mother nature never night Oliver Cromwell once peace perhaps poor present rest ride sate Scotland Scotsbrig seems seen sent silent sleep smoke sorrow soul speak spirit strange talked Templand thank thee thing Thomas Carlyle thou thought tion Troston truth vols walk week whole wife wish woman Woodcuts word write written wrote yesterday
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