Reminiscences (World's Classics)

Reminiscences (World's Classics)

by N/A

Synopsis

Thomas Carlyle was one of the most influential commentators of the 19th century: writer, critic, historian, biographer and brilliant correspondent, he dominated his age. Described as "the greatest writer of his time" his "Reminiscences" trace triumphs, sorrows, and achievements of his often turbulent marriage with Jane Welsh. Devastated by his wife's death, Carlyle set down his recollections of their life together, in an account that reveals much about his own character. The work also recalls Thomas's father, James Carlyle, and his strong sense of identity growing up in Scotland. Jane Carlyle's early loves, Francis Jeffrey (editor of the "Edinburgh Review") and the minister Edward Irving who was destroyed by the mockery of "speaking with tongues", are also remembered, alongside the poets Southey and Wordsworth. Hurriedly published in 1881, the year of Carlyle's death, the "Reminiscences" provoked outrage for their outspokenness. This edition restores the cuts of its first editor and aims to offer a complete and authoritative text, and an introduction to some extraordinary mid-century Victorians.

$3.38

Save:$7.05 (68%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 511
Edition: New
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Published: 18 Sep 1997

ISBN 10: 0192817485
ISBN 13: 9780192817488

Author Bio

K. J Fielding is Emeritus Professor in English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. He is the greatest living authority on Carlyle. Ian Campbell is Lecturer in English at the University of Edinburgh.