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Thomas and Carlyle
He is defined by Thomas Carlyle as " a failure of a Fritz ," with " features " of a Frederick the Great in him, " but who burnt away his splendid qualities as a mere temporary shine for the able editors, and never came to anything, full of fire, too much of it wildfire, not in the least like an Alcibiades except in the change of fortune he underwent ".
* Thomas Carlyle, History of Friedrich ii Chapter iv: Albert the Bear
Thomas Carlyle translated Goethe ’ s novel into English, and after its publication in 1824, many British authors wrote novels inspired by it.
Some took a more benign view ; Thomas Carlyle in his book Sartor Resartus, wrote that a dandy was no more than " a clothes-wearing man ".
On the satirical side, Thomas Carlyle ( 1849 ) coined ' the dismal science ' as an epithet for classical economics, in this context, commonly linked to the pessimistic analysis of Malthus ( 1798 ).
For example, Ralph Waldo Emerson ’ s contempt for Jane Austen's works often extended to the author herself, with Emerson describing her as “ without genius, wit, or knowledge of the world .” In turn, Emerson himself was called a “ hoary-headed toothless baboon ” by Thomas Carlyle.
* Thomas Carlyle on Algarotti
The Scottish historian Thomas Carlyle suggested somewhat more serious English names in his 1837 work The French Revolution: A History, namely Vintagearious, Fogarious, Frostarious, Snowous, Rainous, Windous, Buddal, Floweral, Meadowal, Reapidor, Heatidor, and Fruitidor.
The theory was popularized in the 1840s by Scottish writer Thomas Carlyle, and in 1860 Herbert Spencer formulated a counter-argument that has remained influential throughout the 20th century to the present ; Spencer said that such great men are the products of their societies, and that their actions would be impossible without the social conditions built before their lifetimes.
William Maccall, another Unitarian preacher, and probably an acquaintance of Smith, came somewhat later, although influenced by John Stuart Mill, Thomas Carlyle, and German Romanticism, to the same positive conclusions, in his 1847 work " Elements of Individualism ".
This policy was summed up in Bonaparte's often-quoted phrase " La carrière ouverte aux talents ", careers open to the talented, or as more freely translated by Thomas Carlyle, " the tools to him that can handle them ".
* Carlyle, Thomas ( ed.
" Thomas Carlyle and Oliver Cromwell ", in Proceedings Of The British Academy 105: pp. 131 – 170.
* Carlyle, Thomas ( ed.
" Thomas Carlyle and Oliver Cromwell ", in Proceedings Of The British Academy ( 2000 ) 105: pp. 131 – 170.
Punch enjoyed an audience including: Elizabeth Barrett, Robert Browning, Thomas Carlyle, Edward FitzGerald, Charlotte Brontë, Queen Victoria, Prince Albert, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Emily Dickinson, Herman Melville, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and James Russell Lowell.
At first he read Thomas Carlyle, James Hutton's Geology, Hamilton's Logic.
* January 14 – Jane Welsh Carlyle, wife of essayist Thomas Carlyle ( d. 1866 )
* February 5 – Thomas Carlyle, Scottish writer and historian ( b. 1795 )
* June 10 – Thomas Carlyle moves to Cheyne Row ( Carlyle's House ) in London.
* December 4 – Thomas Carlyle, Scottish writer and historian ( d. 1881 )
From London he also wrote an endless series of letters to his agents in Europe and South America, and made friends with Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle.
* Thomas Carlyle and His Works ( 1847 )
* Thomas Carlyle: Symbols

Thomas and
As can be seen in this stanza from Lord Thomas and Fair Annet ’:
However, a similar objection was noted by Thomas Nagel in 1970 who claimed that consequentialism treats the desires, needs, satisfactions, and dissatisfactions of distinct persons as if they were the desires, etc., of a mass person .’ and even earlier by David Gauthier who wrote that utilitarianism supposes that mankind is a super-person, whose greatest satisfaction is the objective of moral action.
At the time, some believed this lack of growth outside Britain was due to the Malthusian trap ’ theory ; Thomas Malthus argued before the start of the Industrial Revolution that it was the tendency of a population to expand beyond the limits of resource sustainability, at which point a crisis ( such as famine, war, or epidemic ) would reduce the population to a sustainable size.
In 1597 Byrd's pupil Thomas Morley dedicated his treatise A Plaine and Easie Introduction to Practicall Musicke to Byrd in flattering terms, though he may have intended to counterbalance this in the main text by some sharply satirical references to a mysterious Master Bold ’.
* Kapapamahchakwew ( Kā-papāmahcahkwêw, Kapapa Machatiwe, Papamahchakwayo, French: Esprit Errant ’, better known as Wandering Spirit, war chief of the Plains Cree under Mistahimaskwa, born 1845 near Jackfish Lake, Saskatchewan, committed on 2 April 1885, the so-called Frog Lake massacre, killed the Indian Agent Thomas Quinn and eight whites and one Métis, surrendered in July at Fort Pitt, was hanged on 27 November 1885 in Battleford, Saskatchewan )
Biblical scholar Thomas Kelly Cheyne suggested that it might be a derogatory corruption of Ba al Zəbûl, " Lord of the High Place " ( i. e., Heaven ) or " High Lord ".
A typescript of the translation by Thomas Smith uses Whakarangona ’ as one word.
* Ceri Sullivan, Thomas Middleton ’ s View of Public Utility ’, Review of English Studies 58 ( 2007 ), pp. 160 – 74.
It also includes the rare first neurological text written in the 1600s by Thomas Willis, the man who coined the term neurology and is known as the father of neurology ’.
Thomas B. Hess wrote that " the New figurative painting ’ which some have been expecting as a reaction against Abstract Expressionism was implicit in it at the start, and is one of its most lineal continuities.
Henry's father Robert Morgan ( born c. 1615 ) was a descendant from a cadet branch of the Tredegar Morgans ’ and had two brothers, Thomas and Edward.
The late Thomas Leonard, who was the founder of Coach U, the International Coach Federation, Coachville and the International Association of Coaches was an est employee in the 1980 s.
The names Thomas Helwys ’ and William Carey ’ are carved on either side of the door.
* Piers Wauchope, Tollemache, Thomas ( c. 1651 – 1694 )’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004 ; online edn, Jan 2008.
* Sérgio Campos Gonçalves, Thomas Babington Macaulay ’, in Jurandir Malerba ( ed.
In 1761, Voltaire wrote of Thomas Corneille: si vous exceptez Racine, auquel il ne faut comparer personne, il était le seul de son temps qui fût digne d ’ être le premier au-dessous de son frère ' ( if you except Racine, to whom nobody can be compared, he was the first of his time who was worthy to be behind his brother ).
“ Many years ago, Thomas Jefferson coined the metaphor, the wall between church and state .’ I have heard the summons from the other side of the wall.
They had three children together: Richard ( 1708 – 1782 ), an eccentric, playwright and artist whose engravings for Thomas Gray ’ s A Long Story ’ were published in 1753, and two daughters, one named Johanna.
He contributed to Archæologia papers On the Lord Chancellors under King John ,’ On the Relationship of Bishop FitzJames and Lord Chief Justice Fitzjames ,’ On the Lineage of Sir Thomas More ,’ and On the Office and Title of Cursitor Baron of the Exchequer .’ For the Kent Archæological Association, which he helped to found, he wrote a paper On the Collar of S. S .’; and a privately printed volume of poems, A Century of Inventions ,’ appeared in 1863.

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