CarlyleG. Bell and sons, 1909 - 378 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة xii
... clear our minds of cant . " It is customary to describe Carlyle as a great Prophet or a great Teacher . In a sense it cannot be denied that he was both . But many of those who have most benefited from his teaching have abandoned the ...
... clear our minds of cant . " It is customary to describe Carlyle as a great Prophet or a great Teacher . In a sense it cannot be denied that he was both . But many of those who have most benefited from his teaching have abandoned the ...
الصفحة xiii
... clear , not in ambitious colours but in a full white sunlight , of all dialects I have ever listened to . Nothing did I ever hear him attempt 1 to render visible which did not become almost ocularly INTRODUCTION xiii.
... clear , not in ambitious colours but in a full white sunlight , of all dialects I have ever listened to . Nothing did I ever hear him attempt 1 to render visible which did not become almost ocularly INTRODUCTION xiii.
الصفحة xxviii
... the criticism of to - day , was enunciated in clear terms by Carlyle at a time when it came with the freshness and inspiration of a newly revealed truth . The two great underlying principles of his criticism are his xxviii INTRODUCTION.
... the criticism of to - day , was enunciated in clear terms by Carlyle at a time when it came with the freshness and inspiration of a newly revealed truth . The two great underlying principles of his criticism are his xxviii INTRODUCTION.
الصفحة xxix
... clear ; and had we , had I , and my pleasure and confirmation been the chief end of the poet , then doubtless he has failed in that end , and his fault remains a fault irremediably , and without defence . ... To see rightly into this ...
... clear ; and had we , had I , and my pleasure and confirmation been the chief end of the poet , then doubtless he has failed in that end , and his fault remains a fault irremediably , and without defence . ... To see rightly into this ...
الصفحة xxx
... clear view of it as an indivisible Unity ; and whether it has grown up naturally from the general soil of Thought ... clearly and firmly that poetry must be based upon the fundamental realities of " human nature and the nature of things ...
... clear view of it as an indivisible Unity ; and whether it has grown up naturally from the general soil of Thought ... clearly and firmly that poetry must be based upon the fundamental realities of " human nature and the nature of things ...
المحتوى
xiv | |
xxii | |
xxxii | |
xlv | |
xlviii | |
67 | |
76 | |
84 | |
197 | |
205 | |
225 | |
254 | |
279 | |
295 | |
305 | |
311 | |
112 | |
124 | |
135 | |
144 | |
179 | |
324 | |
348 | |
354 | |
368 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
amid beauty become Berline Biography Boötes Boswell Bouillé Burns called Camille Desmoulins cannon Carlyle Carlyle's century character Charlotte Corday clear Craigenputtock criticism Danton dark death divine Drouet Earth Ecclefechan English essays Eternity eyes feeling fire force forever France Fraser's Magazine French French Revolution Friedrich Gardes Françaises genius German Goethe grapeshot hand heart Heaven Hero Historian History hour human humour intellectual Johnson kind King labour Leuthen lies light literary literature living look Louis Majesty man's mean mind Mirabeau moral mysterious National nature never night noble once Paris passion Patriot perhaps Place de Grève Poet poetic poetry poor Prophet R. H. Hutton round Sainte-Menehould Sartor Resartus Schiller seems Shakspeare silent soul speak spirit stand strange thee things Thomas Carlyle thou thought tocsin true truth Universe Village Voltaire whole wonder word write