Carlyle's Life of John Sterling: A Study in Victorian BiographyUMI Research Press, 1987 - 103 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 44
... things are calmer again . ( 11 : 196 ) This is a long way from Carlyle's position of only ten years before when he had proclaimed : " All inmost things , we may say , are melodious ; naturally utter themselves in Song . The meaning of ...
... things are calmer again . ( 11 : 196 ) This is a long way from Carlyle's position of only ten years before when he had proclaimed : " All inmost things , we may say , are melodious ; naturally utter themselves in Song . The meaning of ...
الصفحة 46
... things forbidden by the schoolmaster , -these , I often notice in my Eton acquaintances , are the things that have done them good ; these , and not their inconsiderable or considerable knowledge of Greek accidence at all ! ( 11 : 34 ) ...
... things forbidden by the schoolmaster , -these , I often notice in my Eton acquaintances , are the things that have done them good ; these , and not their inconsiderable or considerable knowledge of Greek accidence at all ! ( 11 : 34 ) ...
الصفحة 59
... things . Such imagery may be taken as a sign of Carlyle's grief . Oppressed by his loss , he naturally uses images of stress and decay to describe the world in which he finds himself , reserving nearly all of the positive images for ...
... things . Such imagery may be taken as a sign of Carlyle's grief . Oppressed by his loss , he naturally uses images of stress and decay to describe the world in which he finds himself , reserving nearly all of the positive images for ...
المحتوى
Coming to Terms with the Past | 29 |
Sotto Voce | 55 |
Conclusions | 69 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
audience believe Carlyle describes Carlyle seems Carlyle writes Carlyle's attitude Carlyle's biographies Caroline Fox century chapter character Christian Church Coleridge critics Cromwell death defense detail Edited emphasis English Biography essay evident example F.D. Maurice fact felt fiction Frederick Frederick Maurice French Revolution friendship Froude Hare Hare's memoir heart hero Herstmonceux human Ibid images important James Anthony Froude John Sterling John Stuart Mill Johnson Julius Hare Latter-Day Pamphlets LaValley least letters literary literature lives Lockhart London material Maurice memory of Sterling modern narrative nature never nineteenth nineteenth-century noble novel observed passage poor portrait praise present question reader Reminiscences Richard Trench Samuel Johnson Sartor Resartus Schiller sense sort soul Sterling's decision Sterling's friends style suggest that Sterling sympathetic sympathy Tennyson things Thomas Carlyle thought Torrijos Trench Tuell ultimately understand University Press Victorian biography written York young