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Carlyle's and autobiography
* Thomas Carlyle's fictional autobiography Sartor Resartus, The Everlasting No ( 1833-34 ):

Carlyle's and with
Burke was familiar with Carlyle's coaching ability, as the latter had coached the Manitoba Moose from 1996 – 2001 ( International Hockey League ) and 2004 – 05 ( American Hockey League ); the Moose had been the Canucks farm club since 2001.
Moore focused on Carlyle's connections with George H. W. Bush and his Secretary of State James A. Baker III, both of whom had at times served as advisers to the firm.
In 1871, Carlyle gave Froude this memorial along with a bundle of Jane's personal papers, to be published after Carlyle's death, if Froude so decided.
Many readers, however, focused upon the latter, particularly Carlyle's unhappy relationship with his wife which soon became a widely used illustration in discussions of the sexual politics of marriage.
The controversy persisted for so long that in 1903, nearly ten years after Froude's death, his daughters decided to publish My Relations with Carlyle, which their father had written in 1887 ; in this pamphlet Froude attempted to justify his decisions as biographer, yet went further than his official biography had by speculating that Carlyle's marriage was unconsummated due to impotence.
Thomas Carlyle's Life of John Sterling was written through dissatisfaction with the Life prefixed to Hare's book.
During a prolonged battle with Octavius and Spider-Man, Carlyle was defeated when Doc Ock ripped open his suit, allowing Spider-Man to fill Carlyle's suit with webbing, although Doc Ock informed his enemy that he only did this to hurt Carlyle rather than to help Spider-Man.
Although Charles Dickens is believed to have used the phrase before Thomas Carlyle, the English practice of binding documents and official papers with red tape was popularized in Carlyle's writings, protesting against official inertia with expressions like " Little other than a red tape Talking-machine, and unhappy Bag of Parliamentary Eloquence ".
There were many 19th century examples of attacks on Enlightenment concepts, parody, and playfulness in literature, including Lord Byron's satire, especially Don Juan ; Thomas Carlyle's Sartor Resartus ; Alfred Jarry's ribald Ubu parodies and his invention of ' Pataphysics ; Lewis Carroll's playful experiments with signification ; the work of Isidore Ducasse, Arthur Rimbaud, Oscar Wilde.
Her lifelong friendships with both Thomas and Jane Carlyle developed until she became Jane Carlyle's closest friend.
Patrick Proctor Alexander also used the name in his book Mill and Carlyle, which contrasted Carlyle's views with those of John Stuart Mill.

Carlyle's and David
Carlyle's first high-profile role came as murderer Albert " Albie " Kinsella in an October 1994 episode of Cracker opposite Robbie Coltrane ( in which Kinsella killed five people, including Christopher Eccleston's DCI David Bilborough ).
Carlyle's theory of Natural Supernaturalism influenced Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, two admirers of Carlyle.

Carlyle's and Charles
It constructed a narrative of cultural continuity, set in opposition to the violent disjunctions of Revolutionary France, a comparison common to the period, as expressed in Thomas Carlyle's The French Revolution: A History and Charles Dickens ' Great Expectations and A Tale of Two Cities.
An earlier attempt, the Harvard Classics ( 1909 ), was promulgated by Harvard University president Charles W. Eliot, whose thesis was the same as Carlyle's:
Meeting him at Alexander Carlyle's in 1759, Charles Townshend considered that no man of his acquaintance ‘ approached so near the two extremes of a god and a brute ’.
* By his fourth wife Frances Ann Beaufort, daughter of Daniel Augustus Beaufort, he had four children, of whom Francis Beaufort, mentioned in Thomas Carlyle's Life of Sterling, married a Spanish lady, Rosa Florentina Eroles, and was by her father of Antonio Eroles Edgeworth, who succeeded his uncle, Charles Sneyd, at Edgeworthstown, and of Francis Ysidro Edgeworth.

Carlyle's and John
* The first draft of Thomas Carlyle's The French Revolution: A History was sent to John Stuart Mill, whose maid mistakenly burned it, forcing Carlyle to rewrite it from scratch.
Carlyle's view was attacked by John Stuart Mill as making a virtue of toil itself, stunting the development of the weak, and committing the " vulgar error of imputing every difference which he finds among human beings to an original difference of nature.
The growth of Shakespeare's reputation is illustrated by a timeline of Shakespeare criticism, from John Dryden's " when he describes any thing, you more than see it, you feel it too " ( 1668 ) to Thomas Carlyle's estimation of Shakespeare as the " strongest of rallying-signs " ( 1841 ) for an English identity.

Carlyle's and Home
He reviewed Curran's Speeches, Carlyle's Life of Cromwell, a pamphlet by Isaac Butt on The Protection of Home Industry, The Age of Pitt and Fox, and later on The Poets and Dramatists of Ireland, edited by Denis Florence MacCarthy ( 4 April 1846 ); The Industrial History of Free Nations, by Torrens McCullagh, and Father Meehan's The Confederation of Kilkenny ( 8 August 1846 ).

Carlyle's and for
* Ecclefechan – Thomas Carlyle's birthplace " The Arched House " is a tourist attraction and has been maintained by the National Trust for Scotland since 1936.
In 2001, the California Public Employees ' Retirement System ( CalPERS ) acquired a 5. 5 % holding in Carlyle's management company for $ 175 million.
Thomas Carlyle's birthplace " The Arched House " is a tourist attraction and has been maintained by the National Trust for Scotland since 1936.
Thomas Carlyle's Past and Present also made the case for Merrie England ; the conclusion of Crotchet Castle by Thomas Love Peacock contrasts the mediaevalism of Mr. Chainmail to the contemporary social unrest.
However, the full phrase " the dismal science " first occurs in Carlyle's 1849 tract entitled Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question, in which he was arguing for the reintroduction of slavery as a means to regulate the labor market in the West Indies:
Screenwriter Ted Griffin lists Packer's story, as recounted in a couple of paragraphs of Dashiell Hammett's The Thin Man, as one of his inspirations for Carlyle's character.
Macmechan suggests that the novel provoked Carlyle's frustration and scorn due to his " zeal for truth and his hatred for fiction " spoken of in his letters of the time.
Logic Spectacles, Thomas Carlyle's name for eyes that can discern only the external relations of things, but not the inner nature of them.

Carlyle's and was
One of the most forceful critics of Carlyle's formulation of the Great Man theory was Herbert Spencer, who believed that attributing historical events to the decisions of individuals was a hopelessly primitive, childish, and unscientific position.
Another of her favourite books was Thomas Carlyle's three-volume treatise The French Revolution: A History ; she later said the work " remained all my life a source of inspiration.
" However, he was implored by Carlyle's brother James and sister Mrs. Austin to continue the work, and in 1882, published the first two volumes.
Amongst the strongest critics of Froude's biographical work was novelist Margaret Oliphant, who wrote in the Contemporary Review of 1883 that biography ought to be the " art of moral portrait painting " and described the publication of Jane Carlyle's papers as the " betrayal and exposure of the secret of a woman ’ s weakness.
This pet of Newton's was also mentioned in Thomas Carlyle's book The French Revolution: A History, employed in discussing the deathbed of Louis XV.
CVC Capital Partners Ltd. was also said to have been bidding but had yet to top Carlyle's price.
In 1825, Bannerman married Margaret Gordon, who was later identified as " Carlyle's first love " by her biographer, who tells of the young schoolmaster Thomas Carlyle, in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, " who was attracted by her intelligence and wit.
Among these was a review of Thomas Carlyle's
Though the unfinished novel deeply impressed Carlyle's wife Jane, Carlyle never published it and its existence was forgotten until long after Carlyle's death.
Carlyle's House, in the district of Chelsea, in central London, England, was the home acquired by the historian and philosopher Thomas Carlyle and his wife Jane Welsh Carlyle, after having lived at Craigenputtock in Dumfriesshire, Scotland.
The house was opened to the public in 1895, just fourteen years after Carlyle's death.

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