The Works of Thomas Carlyle: Critical and miscellaneous essaysChapman and Hall, 1899 |
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Pagina 2
Thomas Carlyle. with the clear air ( far under the stars ) ; and hear its uproar as part of the sick noise of life , -loud , indeed , yet embosomed too , as all noise is , in the infinite of silence . It is an event which can be looked ...
Thomas Carlyle. with the clear air ( far under the stars ) ; and hear its uproar as part of the sick noise of life , -loud , indeed , yet embosomed too , as all noise is , in the infinite of silence . It is an event which can be looked ...
Pagina 18
... hear hisses . I look , I observe four hackney - coaches , coming in a train , escorted by the Fédérés of the Departments . ' Each of these coaches contained four persons : they were individuals ' ( priests ) arrested in the preceding ...
... hear hisses . I look , I observe four hackney - coaches , coming in a train , escorted by the Fédérés of the Departments . ' Each of these coaches contained four persons : they were individuals ' ( priests ) arrested in the preceding ...
Pagina 25
... hear it done . With small inward vocation , but cheerfully obedient to destiny and necessity , the present reviewer will follow a multitude : to do evil or to do no evil , will depend not on the multitude but on himself . One thing he ...
... hear it done . With small inward vocation , but cheerfully obedient to destiny and necessity , the present reviewer will follow a multitude : to do evil or to do no evil , will depend not on the multitude but on himself . One thing he ...
Pagina 29
... hear greatly blamed in Mr. Lockhart that he has been too communicative , indiscreet , and has recorded much that ought to have lain suppressed . Persons are men- tioned , and circumstances , not always of an ornamental sort . It would ...
... hear greatly blamed in Mr. Lockhart that he has been too communicative , indiscreet , and has recorded much that ought to have lain suppressed . Persons are men- tioned , and circumstances , not always of an ornamental sort . It would ...
Pagina 30
... to this man and that ; in other words , calculated to give him and the thing he worked in a living set of features , not leave him vague , in the white beatified - ghost condition . Several men , as we hear , cry out , 30 MISCELLANIES.
... to this man and that ; in other words , calculated to give him and the thing he worked in a living set of features , not leave him vague , in the white beatified - ghost condition . Several men , as we hear , cry out , 30 MISCELLANIES.
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The Works of Thomas Carlyle: Critical and miscellaneous essays Thomas Carlyle Volledige weergave - 1899 |
The Works of Thomas Carlyle: Critical and miscellaneous essays Thomas Carlyle Volledige weergave - 1899 |
The Works of Thomas Carlyle: Critical and miscellaneous essays Thomas Carlyle Volledige weergave - 1899 |
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altogether Assumpcion Baillie become better brave called century Chartism creature divine Duke Duncon earth Elector enduring book England English Ernestine Line eyes fact fighting Francia Frederick French French Revolution friends Gauchos Gervase Markham Goethe heart Heaven High-Sherriffe honour House human humour John the Steadfast Kilwinning kind King Kunz labour Laissez-faire living Long Parliament look Lord manner matter means mind Moritz National Nature never night noble Oliver Cromwell once Paraguay Parliament perhaps persons Poll poor Poor-Law Portraits Prince pumpkins question Rahel reader Rengger Revolution Robertson Roger North Sachsen-Gotha Saxon Scotch seems silent Sir Nathaniel Sir Philip Parker Sir Roger North soul speak Strafford things thou thought tion true truth universal Varnhagen Vengeur Volumes Waverley Novels whole wise withal word worth write young
Populaire passages
Pagina 451 - While earnest thou gazest, Comes boding of terror, Comes phantasm and error; Perplexes the bravest With doubt and misgiving. But heard are the Voices, Heard are the Sages, The Worlds and the Ages: " Choose well ; your choice is Brief, and yet endless. " Here eyes do regard you, In Eternity's stillness ; Here is all fulness, Ye brave, to reward you ; Work, and despair not.
Pagina 61 - ... breeches, and well-polished jockey-boots of the less distinguished cavaliers about him. Dr. Wollaston was in black; and with his noble serene dignity of countenance might have passed for a sporting archbishop.
Pagina 381 - I believe to be, in a deeper or less deep degree, the universal one ; and that every student and reader of History, who strives earnestly to conceive for himself what manner of Fact and Man this or the other vague Historical Name can have been, will, as the first and directest indication of all, search eagerly for a Portrait, for all the reasonable Portraits there are ; and never rest till he have made out, if possible, what the man's natural face was like. Often I have found a Portrait superior...
Pagina 67 - We might say in a short word, which means a long matter, that your Shakspeare fashions his characters from the heart outwards ; your Scott fashions them from the skin inwards, never getting near the heart of them...
Pagina 433 - I believe you will find in all histories of nations, that this has been at the origin and foundation of them all ; and that no nation which did not contemplate this wonderful universe with an awestricken and reverential belief that there was a great unknown, omnipotent, and all-wise and all-just Being, superintending all men in it, and all interests in it, — no nation ever came to very much, nor did any man either, who forgot that. If a man did forget that, he forgot the most important part of...
Pagina 123 - The widow is gathering nettles for her children's dinner ; a perfumed Seigneur, delicately lounging in the CEil-de-Boeuf, has an alchemy whereby he will extract from her the third nettle, and name it Rent and Law : such an arrangement must end.
Pagina 149 - rights of man,' this right of the ignorant man to be guided by the wiser, to be, gently or forcibly, held in the true course by him, is the indisputablest.
Pagina 223 - The lieutenant of Ireland came but on Monday to town late, on Tuesday rested, on Wednesday came to parliament, but ere night he was caged. Intolerable pride and oppression cries to Heaven for a vengeance. The lower house closed their doors, the speaker kept the keys till his accusation was concluded. Thereafter Mr. Pym went up, with a number at his back, to the higher house ; and, in a pretty short speech, did, in the name of the...
Pagina 332 - Exeter-Hall friends ; this, that he shall be permitted, encouraged, and if need be, compelled to do what work the Maker of him has intended by the making of him for this world!
Pagina 381 - Often I have found a Portrait superior in real instruction to half-a-dozen written "Biographies," as Biographies are written; — or rather, let me say, I have found that the Portrait was as a small lighted candle by which the Biographies could for the first time be read, and some human interpretation be made of them...