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E312: British Literature since 1760 Thomas Carlyle Study Questions Alfred J. Drake. Office: 424 University Hall Extra-Credit Journal Instructions: Respond to 6 questions The responses need not be lengthy, but they should be thoughtful -- a few sentences may prove sufficient for some responses, while others may require a paragraph. General Questions 1. Look up the dictionary meanings of the word "sage." How does Carlyle function as a sage for Victorian readers? 2. What are some characteristics of Carlyles prose style in any of the selections we are reading? Portraits "Coleridge" 1. How does Carlyle tie his description of Coleridge's habits and appearance to the quality and effects of his philosophy upon young visitors? What kind of comment on the relevance of romantic thought to a new era does the portrait amount to? "Wordsworth" 1. In what way might this portrait be a comment on Wordsworth's ultimate value to British life and letters? How does Carlyle characterize the progress of Wordsworth's career? 2. What effect does the final description of Wordsworth chewing raisins and hiding behind a green circle to shield his eyes have on the rest of the portrait? Sartor Resartus (The Tailor Retailored) 1. Describe the three stages of Teufelsdröckhs spiritual crisis in Sartor Resartus: What is the Everlasting No? How does it lead to the Center of Indifference? What is the Everlasting Yea? When does Teufelsdröckhs baphometic fire-baptism occur? 2. Describe the spiritual problem that Carlyle addresses in Sartor's The Everlasting Yea. Why cant humans find happiness? What, then, is the solution to this spiritual quandary? 3. How is Carlyle in Sartor Resartus a "recycler" of Christian concepts -- how does he refashion the basic tenets of Christianity to suit what he considers the needs of his own day? 4. In Sartor Resartus, what message do Teufelsdröckh and Carlyle take from their admission that humans cannot know ultimate reality? Is that inability a source of weakness or strength? Why is the acceptance of "mystery" essential to human attempts to create new truths? 5. What, according to Carlyle in Sartor Resartus, is Nature? Relate this concept to his metaphor of clothing. What is the central insight of the "Philosophy of Clothes" developed by Carlyle's fictional Professor Teufelsdröckh? Past and Present Democracy from Past and Present 1. What examples does Carlyle offer of proper relations among humans? How does Carlyle describe relations between humans during feudal times? (See his comments on "Gurth.") 2. How does Carlyle define "liberty"? How does his definition undermine more common ones? Captains of Industry from Past and Present 1. What is Carlyles solution to Britains social problems? What, that is, does Carlyle say should be done with the working classes and the unemployed, and who should do it? 2. Why does Carlyle borrow a feudal term like "aristocracy" for his new hero-class? What is the implication, that is, of such an anachronistic borrowing for Carlyle's view of historical progress and of his own day's social and political developments?
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