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ajk^— " —¦— -— ——-—————' -I Feb. 15, 188...
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Much interest is felt in the United Stat...
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THE PRESS ON MR. CARLYLE. Following the ...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Is L)Iit There Sixty Are Years Two Old L...
« h were found famous there all over until Europe Sir Henry by his Savile superb came edition to watch of ' over Chrysostom the college . ' B and y slow to make degrees the it Eton has been press enriched with many curiositiesboth in print and in manuscript . There slumber on its
, III shelves / the an composition unpublished H - and supp the lement handwriting to the f « - -ww * Histori hk of Horace c Doubts Wal on pole the himself Life and and Rei mtr gn an of edition Richard of
references Catullus m ^^ 1 ^^^^ . ^ ' - - ^^^ K ^^ ^ , Tibullus m ^^ to ^ 1 Greek 11 , writers - and Propertiua " ¦—v in the — 1 ' .. - ^ — — minute which — — - n ^ of penmanship ^ once ^^^^ ^^™ ^^ belonged mm ^» ^^^— - ^ v ^^— ^ v ^ ' ¦ " ^^ ^^^ of the to ^^ « r ^ r ~^^ m ^^ ^ Gray ^ y poet r ^ ^™ t ~^^ F ^^ , ^» . ^ p «^» and ^ v ^ Even ^^ ^^^ ^ « ^ ^^ v , ^ p contains ^ r ^ p «» more ^ v ^^ . ^ rnr ^ r ^^^^* preciou - numerous mmr ^^^ B ^^ ^» ^^™ ^^ v ^^^ p s in - ^^ a ^ B
the the eyes Marq of ais m scholars of « 1 Wellesley ¦ is the 1 , annotate the ¦ best ¦ ' ' " ^ - copy write -- r of * the . « Latin ¦ ' " M mm > usse verse . Etonenses -m— in m . ' this century ' which « . « . once There belonged are oth m to er .
mementos of great men within its walls , but its most valuable legacy of books came to it from Anthony Morris Storer , one of the gayest of the gay men who fluttered round George Selwyn and Horace Walpole .
Ajk^— " —¦— -— ——-—————' -I Feb. 15, 188...
ajk ^— " —¦— - — —— - ————— ' -I Feb . 15 , 1881 The Publishers Circular I 29
Much Interest Is Felt In The United Stat...
Much interest is felt in the United States in the forthcoming volume by Mr . Jeffersoa Davis , which is to be published by Messrs . Appleton , of New York , and which has occupied
the last five years of his life . It is entitled * The History of the Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government / and it will be published in two volumes , and sold entirely by subscription at 20 s . each . The publishers have booked a single order for Missouri for 5000
and they expect to print 100 , 000 copies . The first volume discusses the constitutional ,, questionthe second describes the conduct of the war . It will be illustrated with portraits
of leading , Southerners and dedicated to the widows and orphans of the men who were slain in ithe vain k b struggle for Secession M A . Mrafe . Davis , it is said h , will receive K h tt enoug A \ h from the early « ^^^ mm - ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ > ^^ ^ m ^^
sales of his work to make him independent and easy for the rest of his lite .
The Press On Mr. Carlyle. Following The ...
THE PRESS ON MR . CARLYLE . Following the course which we adopted in the case of George Eliot , we give a brief
summary of the opinions expressed by some of the leading newspapers upon Mr . Carlyle : — The Times says : — ' The secret of the ascendency Thomas Carlyle has exerted over his countrymen of low living , and and hi more gh thinking than his before countrymen he presumed , has been to that educate he had them educated . A sense himself of this in his living art
been power the within right , of divine which by his which greatest he has works reigned were in onl literature y a samp . ' le , has , more than all he has done ^ The — Standard 1 ~^_~ ~ v — — - _ ~ w - ^ -w - ^ ^ ^ i ^^ defines ^^^ - ^» ^^^ a ^ b imut ^ m * ^ m ^ r j him 4 k *^ ^ mr ^^^^^ h ^^ ip v as ^^^ r ^^ ' the w ^^ mr ^ mr ^ most m *^*^^^ ^^^ ^ f - ^ 0 powerful mt- ^ — ~ v mj ~^ mr tm ^ ^ m * ^ - ^ mr ^^ and ^^^» ^™ ^ " ^^^^^ the ^^ ^~ ~^ ^^ most ~^—^ — " ^ ¦ ~^ — " widel — ^ ¦— — — y-fel ^ t force which our
literature has known in our time . His long struggle lias been a Titanic warfare against said wrong adopting , and ¦ a mi his ght y impulse mode of towards thought all that human a real nobleness hero «> is and worth . He . has With ¦ left ¦ - —¦ his him traces , it may more - ___ be
deep ¦ I , ly than I — ^ B r- " — ^^ fc ^*» any a * ¦ . ^* s sing >* a ^> r v v le mm aa Eng m ^* a w *^ - mut *_ r v ^« i lishman BA ^ - * a ^^ ^ ^ l ^/ » a > . ^ «_ on ^ kb * ^ ^ the — , a ^^* m ^ moral «» ** *^ r ^ *¦ ^^*** character w m ^ m > , ^ ^^^ ^* m - . *> . « v ^ of gone v ^ ^ - M w * - - » the * ^ ^ ^^ » century . ^~^^ ¦ ^ r ^ —»—— . ' — —— —— — — The Dail ¦ JS ¦ r avs : -Hardl \ JU even the m Tar ost indiscreet admirer ¦« of these - — ' —Macaulay f
— - ' — ^^ - w ms v ' y w * mm *\ ^ ^ ^ s \ ^ says p ^ J ^ v W P ^/ ^ mw W J ^ ^^** ** y W ^^ » ^^ « - *¦ ^^ - * ^ ^^ V . ^ " ^^ ^^ ^^ ^ ** ^»^* J ^^^ ^ fc ^ *^ ^^ ^^ ^ w ^ m" ^ * . ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^^ ^» ^^^ ^^ — — — r — ¦^ -- - —~— — — — — — — , more mure Dickens of oi , ' and Sartor Sartor George Kesartns Resartn Eliot s / — ' and and would the the jilace autho autho them r r in in day dava on s whicli which a level are are with still still the almost almost author recent recent fifty ye of 01 ars 4 Frederi * reaericK ago and ck
critical the Great humourist . ' 'What had Mr to . teach Carlyle was , wh not om a some gospel have but called an attitude a great teacher Butfor and thirty others a mere at
least , his influence , has always , been an awakening , influence—an influence . , tending to years dispel humbii numou g fir , to to shatter shatter mere mere idols idols ot of the the cave cave and and tribe tribe , to to impress impress on on every every man man that tnat " " save save ins his
better own soul sink he at hat once h no and star uuako ; " and no that moan if about he cannot it ' keep , that star bright and in view , he had
matter The fill , on Dail ^ fl ^^ v every _ y Telegrap _ thinking h says man : — and c On woman the first during . half of a certain the present stage generation of mental a , evolution and fl ^ K , for ^ h ¦ , that Mr ^ B .
and in yarl their yle ' a sp writings iritual natures have exercised , forces and a vas impulses t influence the . awakening He , more than of which any other has made man , them has aroused braver
better strivers in the battle of life . ' Uirl The ylism Mornin is extinguished g Advertiser almost , striking as another letel chord as that , remarks other that movement ' the fanaticism with which of the the cult name of
tjiat « t Cardinal the gospel Newman he iit preached is associated has moulded . comp Is the with worl y d any than "better temporary for his impressions efforts t ? Can the uiavj it mind ii & be sai * of d
conveyed , 1 no ato " age ^ ^ ? nothing iiotmiig " He opv / i tailked ; ( definite JiJJL tenmte UttUIlUU too vaguel , nothing noth lliXa y i UlUlllUtJU ng . winch which Hia words one one Wltll could could were more lUUlU grasp srasn sounding tJltt > ll as as teui the me and pUKU hand liana full j or of uujii of a a suggestion gu miide ; . ^^ uie ^ nr . . Love i ^ , ove but tru trmn they v . th ,,
» ertain the that — false ¦ posteri . This i ihy t is will Will Carl , admire aiUIUlU ylism , and Thomas excellent Carl Vytlx le as UIUI far as it goes writer wajli ; but i than tuau that as ia a not moralist n » v ^* far . Tt as is a
laracteriatics aster aJio of Mor « uni « j ning ^ que vrsu ori ^ prose Pos y t rather says : — than * His XllOUlfclo as literary a philosop works iy y hical iU more all teacher U bear » as L ^ . a the ' impress ;; of <* the c * writer «** . » . - ' s , , own c * o «• f
aim 11 - jf 1 ^ MancJiestcr ^ orco — g Examiner inalit the saving y , talent say virtue , s grim that of humour in society Mr . , . Carl eccentric Our yle ' business a eyes diction * obedience was , pathos to get , and was rid force of the sh one . ' ams thing and
in han l - l y f , and ro ^^ . a » . n and + ; to f ^ a sharp keo lr / i « - » P -x overseer humanitar KiiTYionilnmaniam for ianism nigge w -or rs ell rill . under nn Mr / lor . Oariy , alway alTiraxra le s vouchsafe to in hav li n . Vf e d a us cat fTfLt . these - - o O * - nine ni Tlft lessons - tails tniift ,
- ™ ciiaractor as a seer . > ; . I n / v Of « _ . •*__ __ . . ^ _ . * .. a
^^ in J E ^ ish 1 1 literature ? maii remar for «» nearl that y C half arly a le century was , perhaps , and , ncpift all things will deny considered that in , him tlie greatest was the torce most ^^^——— : —¦ — -vfifo
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), Feb. 15, 1881, page 129, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_15021881/page/5/
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