Carlyle and TennysonUniversity of Iowa Press, 1988 - 284 pages |
Contents
The Scottish Dimension | 3 |
Hume and Newton | 7 |
Newton and Carlylean Belief | 23 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
able aesthetic Artist attempt beauty become beginning belief believe Byron Carlyle Carlyle's Carlylean character child clear comes concern course critics death Divine early earth emphasise especially essay evident expressed fact faith father feeling finally Froude German Goethe hand heart Heaven hero human Hume ideas idylic important influence interest kind later letter literature live look matter Maud meaning mind moral mother moving nature never Newton once passage perhaps philosopher poem poet poetry praise present Prince Princess qualities readers reflects religious reveals Sartor seems seen sense soul speak specific spirit suggested talk tells Tennyson things thou thought true truth turned understand universe Victorian vision whole wonder writes written