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Thomas
Carlyle
(17951881)
Essayist
and historian
One of the foremost writers and intellectuals of his era, Carlyle
wrote influential works on The French Revolution, Cromwell and
Frederick the Great, emphasising the cult of a great man as
national moral leader.
Carlyle
was born in Ecclefechan, Dumfries and Galloway, as the son of
a stonemason and small farmer. He was brought up in a strict
Calvinist household. At the age of 15 he went to University
of Edinburgh, receiving his B.A. in 1813. From 1813 to 1818
he studied for the ministry of the Church of Scotland, but abandoned
this course and studied law for a while.
Carlyle
taught at Annan Academy (1814-16), at Kircaldy Grammar School
(1816-18), and privately in Edinburg (1818-22). During this
time he worked at his Life of Schiller, which was first published
by the London Magazine in 1823-24. He wrote contributions for
Brewter's Edinburgh Encyclopedia, also contributing to such
journals as Edinburgh Review and Fraser's Magazine. From 1824
he was a full-time writer and undertook thorough study of German
literature, especially Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Carlyle's
essays on German philosophy introduced many new ideas to the
British public. He also produced a translation of a work by
Goethe, which was highly acclaimed.
In
1826 Carlyle married Jane Baillie Welsh, whose wit made her
an exellent letterwriter - her circle of correspondents included
many eminent Victorians. Oppressed by financial difficulties
the Carlyles returned to Jane's farm at Craigenputtock and concentrated
on writing. While staying in London in 1831, Carlyle became
acquainted with J.S. Mill, who later introduced him to Emerson,
the American philosopher and essayist. In 1834 he moved with
his wife to London. Carlyle's breakthrough work, Sartor Resartus,
was published in 1833-34. Part autobiography, part philosophy,
it was written using an energetic, complex language that came
to be called 'Carlylese'. Another major work, a three volume
history of the French Revolution, appared in 1837, and a biography
of Fredrick the Great in 1858-65. From 1837 to 1840 Carlyle
undertook several series of lectures, of which the most significant
was On Heroes, Hero-Worship and the Heroic in History (1841).
After
his wife's death in 1866, from which he never completely recovered,
Carlyle retired from public life, and wrote little. He gave
her papers and letters in 1871 to his friend J.A. Froude, who
published them after Carlyles death. Froude also published Carlyle's
Reminiscenes (1881) and a four-volume biography (1882-84). Carlyle
was appointed Rector of the University of Edinburgh in 1866,
and in 1874 he received Prussian Order of Merit. However, Carlyle
declined baronecy from Disraeli. Carlyle died on February 5,
1881 in London. His grave is in Ecclefechan.
History
was Carlyle the storehouse of 'heroes', and in this intuitive
spirit he wrote such works as The French Revolution (1837),
On Heroes and Hero Worship, Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches
(1845), Frederick II of Prussia (1858-65). He opposed analytic
reasoning and quasi-scientific treatment of social questions
by the rationalist political economists, and advocated the more
emotional and intuitive approach of the 18th and 19th century
German thinkers like Richter and Goethe. Carlyle's Sartor Resartus
was a disguised spiritual autobiography, in which he faces the
tendencies to intellectual scepticism and dedicates himself
to a life of spiritual affirmation. The first half of the book
is about the ideas of a self-made philosopher who believes everything
can be explained in terms of clothes. The French Revolution
was written in dramatic language bringing the history of the
revolution alive in a way that few historians have ever done.
However, the manuscript was first accidentally burned by a domestic
servant and Carlyle rewrote the book, which was published when
he was 42.
As
an essayist Carlyle's career began with two pieces in the Edinburgh
Review in 1827. He expressed sympathy for the condition of the
working class in the long essay Chartism (1839). In 'The Negro
Question' (1850) he addressed the subject of West Indian slavery
in intemperate and for the modern day reader doubtly repugnant
terms. Carlyle's cynicism with English society was evident in
the Latter-Day Pamphlets (1850). As in his historical studies,
Carlyle insisted the importance of the individual, and raised
serious questions about democracy, mass persuasion, and politics.
This also isolated him from the liberal and democratic tendencies
of his age. In the 20th-century his reputation waned, partly
because his trust in authority and admiration of strong leaders,
which were interpreted as foreshadowing of Fascism.
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