Critical and Miscellaneous Essays

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Critical and Miscellaneous Essays
File:Title page of Critical and Miscellaneous Essays.jpg
Title page of the first American edition
Author Thomas Carlyle
Country United States
Language English
Publisher James Munroe and Company
Publication date
1838–1839
Media type Print (hardback)

Critical and Miscellaneous Essays is the title of a collection of reprinted reviews and other magazine pieces by the Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher Thomas Carlyle. Along with Sartor Resartus and The French Revolution it was one of the books that made his name. Its subject matter ranges from literary criticism (especially of German literature) to biography, history and social commentary. These essays have been described as "Intriguing in their own right as specimens of graphic and original nonfiction prose…indispensable for understanding the development of Carlyle's mind and literary career",[1] and the scholar Angus Ross has noted that the review-form displays in the highest degree Carlyle's "discursiveness, allusiveness, argumentativeness, and his sense of playing the prophet's part."[2]

Publication

Carlyle earned his living during the late 1820s and early 1830s as a reviewer and essayist, contributing to the Edinburgh Review, the Foreign Review, Fraser's Magazine, and other journals. As early as 1830 he thought about collecting these pieces in book form, but it was not until 1837 that he seriously prepared for such an edition,[3] when with the help of his friends Ralph Waldo Emerson, Harriet Martineau and others, he entered into negotiations with the Boston publisher James Munroe. The Critical and Miscellaneous Essays were duly published by him in four volumes, the first two being issued on 14 July 1838, with a preface by Emerson, and the last two on 1 July 1839. 250 copies of the Munroe edition were sent to the London publisher James Fraser, who first sold them under his own imprint and then, in 1840, produced a second edition.[4][5] A third edition followed in 1847, and a fourth in 1857, each published by the firm of Chapman & Hall, and each incorporating additions from Carlyle's continuing journalistic output.[6]

Reception

American Unitarian minister James Freeman Clarke recalled in 1864 that "especially to the younger men, this new writer came, opening up unknown worlds of beauty and wonder. A strange influence, unlike any other, attracted us to his writing. Before we knew his name, we knew him. We could recognize an article by our new author as soon as we opened the pages of the Foreign Review, Edinburgh, or Westminster, and read a few paragraphs."[7] In the preface to the Boston edition, Emerson reminded American readers of "pages which, in the scattered anonymous sheets of the British magazines, spoke to their youthful mind with an emphasis that hindered them from sleep."[8]

Richard Wagner referenced "Novalis" in his essay "On Poetry and Composition" (1879). Doctor and theosophist William Ashton Ellis quoted from "Novalis" in a lecture delivered at a meeting of the Society for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts on 3 February 1887.[9]

List of essays

The following is a list of the contents of the Critical and Miscellaneous Essays as they appear in the Centenary Edition (originally published 1896–1899), being the standard edition of the works of Thomas Carlyle.

Volume I

C. G. Heyne

Volume II

Novalis

Volume III

Volume IV

Volume V

File:Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.jpg
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu

Bibliography

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Notes

  1. First collected in the 1840 edition.
  2. First collected in the 1847 edition.
  3. First collected in the 1847 edition.
  4. First collected in the 1847 edition.
  5. First collected in the 1857 edition.
  6. First collected in the 1857 edition.
  7. First collected in the 1857 edition.
  8. First collected in the 1857 edition.[10][11]

References

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  7. Clarke, James Freeman. "The Two Carlyles, or Carlyle Past and Present." In Nineteenth Century Questions, 167. Boston, 1897. Reprint, Freeport, N.Y.: Books for Libraries Press, 1972.
  8. The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle. Ed. Joseph Slater. New York: Columbia University Press, 1964. p. 5.
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External links

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