- this article:
Sartor Resartus Sartor Resartus, 1901 editions, on
Wikimedia Commons Sartor Resartus at
Standard Ebooks Sartor Resartus: the life and opinions...
-
novelist George Meredith;
whereas Thomas Carlyle, in his
novel Sartor Resartus (1831),
dismissed the
dandy as "a clothes-wearing man"; Honoré de Balzac's...
- W****erstein
writes that its
first recorded use in
English was the
novel Sartor Resartus (1833–34) by
Thomas Carlyle, who for
reasons unknown attributed it to a...
-
least 1831, when
Thomas Carlyle mentioned "Afghan shawls" in his
Sartor Resartus. By 1860,
Afghan as a noun, not an adjective,
denoted a type of handicrafted...
- symbols, or clothes,
representing the
eternal and infinite. In
Sartor Resartus, he
defines the "Symbol proper" as that in
which there is "some embodiment...
- for
various journals. His
first major work was a
novel entitled Sartor Resartus (1833–34).
After relocating to London, he
became famous with his French...
-
Cincinnatus is
referenced in Book II,
Chapter 1 of
Thomas Carlyle's
Sartor Resartus. The
protagonist of
Vladimir Nabokov's
Invitation to a
Beheading is named...
- Carlyle's
English translation of Goethe's
novel (1824) and his own
Sartor Resartus (1833–34), the
first English bildungsroman,
inspired many
British novelists...
- fame as she was, And so
stand fix'd ... In the 19th-century
novel Sartor Resartus by
Thomas Carlyle,
Diogenes Teufelsdröckh uses the
phoenix as a metaphor...
-
distinguished him from his contemporaries. Carlyle's
writing in
Sartor Resartus is
described as "a
distinctive mixture of
exuberant poetic rhapsody, Germanic...