Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXX, No. 3, March 1847

GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.
Vol. XXX. March, 1847. No. 3.
Table of Contents
Fiction, Literature and Articles
Poetry and Fashion
drawn by J. Smillie from a sketch by T. Addison Richards Graham's Magazine 1844. Eng d by Rawdon, Wright, Hatch & Smillie
GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.
Vol. XXX. PHILADELPHIA, MARCH, 1847. No. 3.
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BY HENRY D. THOREAU.
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Thomas Carlyle is a Scotchman, born about fifty years ago, “at Ecclefechan, Annandale,” according to one authority. “His parents ‘good farmer people,’ his father an elder in the Secession church there, and a man of strong native sense, whose words were said to ‘nail a subject to the wall.’ ” We also hear of his “excellent mother,” still alive, and of “her fine old covenanting accents, concerting with his transcendental tones.” He seems to have gone to school at Annan, on the shore of the Solway Firth, and there, as he himself writes, “heard of famed professors, of high matters classical, mathematical, a whole Wonderland of Knowledge,” from Edward Irving, then a young man “fresh from Edinburgh, with college prizes, &c.”—“come to see our schoolmaster, who had also been his.” From this place, they say, you can look over into Wordsworth’s country. Here first he may have become acquainted with Nature, with woods, such as are there, and rivers and brooks, some of whose names we have heard, and the last lapses of Atlantic billows. He got some of his education, too, more or less liberal, out of the University of Edinburgh, where, according to the same authority, he had to “support himself,” partly by “private tuition, translations for the booksellers, &c.,” and afterward, as we are glad to hear, “taught an academy in Dysart, at the same time that Irving was teaching in Kirkaldy,” the usual middle passage of a literary life. He was destined for the church, but not by the powers that rule man’s life; made his literary début in Fraser’s Magazine, long ago; read here and there in English and French, with more or less profit, we may suppose, such of us at least as are not particularly informed, and at length found some words which spoke to his condition in the German language, and set himself earnestly to unravel that mystery—with what success many readers know.

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Год издания

2018-02-11

Темы

Literature, Modern -- 19th century -- Periodicals; Literature -- Periodicals

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