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Latter-Day Pamphlets

Latter-Day Pamphlets was a series of "pamphlets" published by Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher Thomas Carlyle in 1850,[1] in vehement denunciation of what he believed to be the political, social, and religious imbecilities and injustices of the period.[2]

Latter-Day Pamphlets
Title page of the first English book edition
AuthorThomas Carlyle
CountryEngland
LanguageEnglish
Published1850
PublisherChapman and Hall

Composition

Carlyle was deeply impacted by the Revolutions of 1848 and his journeys to Ireland in 1846 and 1849 during the Great Famine. After struggling to formulate his response to these events, he wrote to his sister in January 1850 that he had "decided at last to give vent to myself in a Series of Pamphlets; 'Latter-Day Pamphlets' is the name I have given them, as significant of the ruinous overwhelmed and almost dying condition in which the world paints itself to me."[3] The title is derived from the Book of Job: "For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth".

Overview

Carlyle called the Pamphlets "Carlylese 'Tracts for the Times,'" referring to the writings of John Henry Newman and the Oxford Movement. The comparison is apt, as Carlyle's polemical style and his search for an authoritative center of life share many similarities with the movement.[4] Latter-Day Pamphlets is, at its core, a rebuke of democracy, "the grand, alarming, imminent, and indisputable Reality" of the time,[5] rooted in Carlyle's two basic principles of immutable order and eternal laws.[6] Carlyle conceived of the work as a sort of prose epic; though his original plan to produce twelve pamphlets – the number of books associated with such epics as the Aeneid and Paradise Lost – may have been coincidental, Carlyle's rhetoric echoes the epic form.[7] Carlyle announced the theme of his modern epic using the traditional epic question:

What is Democracy; this huge inevitable Product of the Destinies, which is everywhere the portion of our Europe in these latter days? There lies the question for us. Whence comes it, this universal big black Democracy; whither tends it; what is the meaning of it? A meaning it must have, or it would not be here. If we can find the right meaning of it, we may, wisely submitting or wisely resisting and controlling, still hope to live in the midst of it; if we cannot find the right meaning, if we find only the wrong or no meaning in it, to live will not be possible![8]

The best known of the pamphlets in the collection is Hudson's Statue, an attack on plans to erect a monument to the bankrupted financier George Hudson, known as the "railway king".[9] The pamphlet expresses a central theme of the book — the corrosive effects of populist politics and of a culture driven by greed.[10] Carlyle also attacked the prison system,[11] which he believed to be too liberal, and democratic parliamentary government.

The imaginary figure of "Bobus", a corrupt sausage-maker turned politician first introduced in Past and Present, is used to epitomise the ways in which modern commercial culture saps the morality of society.

Contents

The pamphlets[1] are:

  • No. 1. The Present Time (1 February 1850)
  • No. 2. Model Prisons (1 March 1850)
  • No. 3. Downing Street (1 April 1850)
  • No. 4. The New Downing Street (15 April 1850)
  • No. 5. Stump-Orator (1 May 1850)
  • No. 6. Parliaments (1 June 1850)
  • No. 7. Hudson's Statue (1 July 1850)
  • No. 8. Jesuitism (1 August 1850)

Reception and influence

Hale White remarked that upon publication of the Pamphlets, "almost all the reviews united in a howl of execration".[12] David Masson said that never before "was there a publication so provocative of rage, hatred and personal malevolence." Carlyle's biographer David Alec Wilson wrote that since the "letters of Junius, nothing so sensational in politics had been printed in England".[13]

Friedrich Engels reviewed the first two pamphlets in April 1850.[14] He approved of Carlyle's criticisms against hereditary aristocracy while harshly criticising Carlyle's views as "a thinly disguised acceptance of existing class rule" and an unjust exoneration of statism.[15] Karl Marx would later attack Carlyle's "model prisons" and "aristocracy of talent" in two articles for the New York Daily Tribune, appearing in September and October 1853 respectively. Anthony Trollope for his part considered that in the Pamphlets "the grain of sense is so smothered in a sack of the sheerest trash. . . . He has one idea – a hatred of spoken and acted falsehood; and on this, he harps through the whole eight pamphlets".[16] A century later, Northrop Frye would similarly speak of the work as "tantrum prose" and "rhetorical ectoplasm".[17]

Ralph Waldo Emerson expressed his appreciation of the work in an August 1850 letter to Carlyle. "The vivid daguerrotype of the times, the next ages will thank you for; but the circling baulking Present refuses to be helped."[18] Charles Dickens agreed with Carlyle's feeling, as expressed in Model Prisons, that criminals were being treated better than paupers. Dickens echoed Carlyle in an article entitled 'Pet Prisoners' which appeared in Household Words, a magazine edited by Dickens.[19] John Ruskin wrote in 1862, upon re-reading the Pamphlets, especially Jesuitism, that "I can't think what Mr. Carlyle wants me to write anything more for—if people don't attend to that, what more is to be said?"[20] Carlyle's arguments against the attempt to "reform society through the exclusive mechanism of the ballot-box" impacted Ruskin, John Stuart Mill, and Charles Kingsley, who equally denounced the folly of the "mere brute 'arithmocracy.'"[21] Professor H. J. C. Grierson regarded the Pamphlets as "central work" in Carlyle's œuvre.[22]

 
Carlyle (second from right) depicted with Frederick Maurice in Ford Madox Brown's painting Work (1865). A woman with a Bobus sandwich board appears to the left of his head.

In The Present Time, Carlyle criticized American democracy:

"What have they done?" . . . "They have doubled their population every twenty years. They have begotten, with a rapidity beyond recorded example, Eighteen Millions of the greatest bores ever seen in this world before:—that, hitherto, is their feat in History!"—And so we leave them, for the present; and cannot predict the success of Democracy, on this side of the Atlantic, from their example.[23]

This line provoked a reply from abolitionist Elizur Wright in the form of his own pamphlet, Perforations in the "Latter-Day Pamphlets" by One of the "Eighteen Millions of Bores"; it attacked Carlyle as ignorant and reactionary, concluding: ". . . we will take in good part the broad hint to make our calls shorter and less frequent at Cheyne Row."[24] Samuel Gray Ward later avoided a visit accordingly. Carlyle wrote to Emerson in November 1850, "tho' Elizur sent me his Pamphlet, it is a fact that I have not read a word of it, nor shall ever read."[25]

In his painting Work, inspired by the book, Ford Madox Brown depicted Carlyle watching honest workers improving the social infrastructure by laying modern drains in a suburb of London, while agents of the dishonest Bobus disfigure the area by marketing his political campaign with posters and sandwich boards.

George Fitzhugh derived the title of Cannibals All! or, Slaves without Masters (1857) from The Present Time, also quoting from it extensively.[26]

Richard Wagner wrote in "Letter to H. v. Stein" (1883), "Carlyle has plainly proved to us the natural relation of all Colonies to their mother-land", referring to The New Downing Street.[27]

Herbert Agar quoted from The Present Time in the introduction to The Land of the Free (1935). He used an image of Carlyle's to characterize big industry, big cities and big government as "Enormous Megatherions".[28]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Carlyle, Thomas (1850). Latter-Day Pamphlets. London: Chapman & Hall.
  2. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWood, James, ed. (1907). "Latter-Day Pamphlets". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne.
  3. ^ Carlyle, T. (7 October 1850). "TC TO JEAN CARLYLE AITKEN". The Carlyle Letters Online. 25 (1): 10–11. doi:10.1215/lt-18500126-TC-JCA-01. ISSN 1532-0928.
  4. ^ Goldberg & Seigel 1983, p. XLII.
  5. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1850). Latter-Day Pamphlets. The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes. Vol. 20. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (published 1903). p. 9.
  6. ^ Goldberg & Seigel 1983, p. XXIX.
  7. ^ Seigel 1976, pp. 164–173.
  8. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1850). Latter-Day Pamphlets. The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes. Vol. 20. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (published 1903). pp. 9–10.
  9. ^ Lambert, Richard Stanton (1934). The Railway King, 1800-1871. London: G. Allen & Unwin ltd.
  10. ^ Cumming, Mark (2004). "Latter-Day Pamphlets." In: The Carlyle Encyclopedia. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, p. 271.
  11. ^ Seigel, Jules (1976). "Carlyle's Model Prison and Prisoners Identified," Victorian Periodicals Newsletter 9 (3), pp. 81–83.
  12. ^ "Pages From a Journal, by Mark Rutherford". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  13. ^ Goldberg 1976, pp. 129–130.
  14. ^ "Reviews from the Neue Rheinische Zeitung Politish-Ökonomische Revue No. 4" contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 10 (International Publishers: New York, 1978) pp. 301–310.
  15. ^ "Reviews from the Neue Rheinische Zeitung Politisch-Ökonomische Revue No. 4" contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 10, p. 306.
  16. ^ Quoted in M. Sadleir, Trollope (London, 1945), p. 158.
  17. ^ N. Frye, Anatomy of Criticism (Princeton, 1971), pp. 21 and 325.
  18. ^ The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle. Ed. Joseph Slater. New York: Columbia University Press, 1964. p. 461.
  19. ^ Dickens, Charles (27 April 1850). "Pet Prisoners". Household Words. Vol. I. London. pp. 97–103.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  20. ^ Ruskin, John (1909). Cook, E. T.; Wedderburn, Alexander (eds.). The Letters of John Ruskin (1827-1869). The Works of John Ruskin. Vol. XXXVI. London: George Allen, 156, Charing Cross Road. New York: Longmans, Green, and Co. p. 428.
  21. ^ Kingsley, Charles (1854). "Preface". Alton Locke. London: J. M. Dent (published 1910). p. 19.
  22. ^ Goldberg & Seigel 1983, p. XIII.
  23. ^ Carlyle's Latter-Day Pamphlets. Ed. Michael K. Goldberg and Jules P. Seigel. Ottawa: Canadian Federation for the Humanities, 1983. p. 28.
  24. ^ The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle. Ed. Joseph Slater. New York: Columbia University Press, 1964. p. 463n.
  25. ^ The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle. Ed. Joseph Slater. New York: Columbia University Press, 1964. p. 464.
  26. ^ Fitzhugh, George (1968). Woodward, C. Vann (ed.). Cannibals All! or, Slaves without Masters. The John Harvard Library. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. xiv.
  27. ^ Wagner, Richard (1994). Religion and Art. Translated by Ellis, William Ashton. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 330–331.
  28. ^ Karanikas, Alexander (1966). Tillers of a Myth: Southern Agrarians as Social and Literary Critics. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 80.

Bibliography

  • Cumming, Mark, ed. (2004). The Carlyle Encyclopedia. Madison and Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 978-0-8386-3792-0.
  • Goldberg, Michael (1976). "A Universal 'howl of execration': Carlyle's Latter-Day Pamphlets and Their Critical Reception". In Clubbe, John (ed.). Carlyle and His Contemporaries: Essays in Honor of Charles Richard Sanders. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. pp. 129–147. ISBN 9780822303404.
  • Goldberg, M. K.; Seigel, J. P., eds. (1983). Carlyle's Latter-Day Pamphlets. Canadian Federation for the Humanities.
  • Seigel, Jules P. (1976). "Latter-Day Pamphlets: The Near Failure of Form and Vision". In Fielding, K. J.; Tarr, Rodger L. (eds.). Carlyle Past and Present: A Collection of New Essays. Vision Press. pp. 155–176. ISBN 9780854783731.

External links

latter, pamphlets, series, pamphlets, published, scottish, essayist, historian, philosopher, thomas, carlyle, 1850, vehement, denunciation, what, believed, political, social, religious, imbecilities, injustices, period, title, page, first, english, book, editi. Latter Day Pamphlets was a series of pamphlets published by Scottish essayist historian and philosopher Thomas Carlyle in 1850 1 in vehement denunciation of what he believed to be the political social and religious imbecilities and injustices of the period 2 Latter Day PamphletsTitle page of the first English book editionAuthorThomas CarlyleCountryEnglandLanguageEnglishPublished1850PublisherChapman and Hall Contents 1 Composition 2 Overview 3 Contents 4 Reception and influence 5 Notes 6 Bibliography 7 External linksComposition EditCarlyle was deeply impacted by the Revolutions of 1848 and his journeys to Ireland in 1846 and 1849 during the Great Famine After struggling to formulate his response to these events he wrote to his sister in January 1850 that he had decided at last to give vent to myself in a Series of Pamphlets Latter Day Pamphlets is the name I have given them as significant of the ruinous overwhelmed and almost dying condition in which the world paints itself to me 3 The title is derived from the Book of Job For I know that my redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth Overview EditCarlyle called the Pamphlets Carlylese Tracts for the Times referring to the writings of John Henry Newman and the Oxford Movement The comparison is apt as Carlyle s polemical style and his search for an authoritative center of life share many similarities with the movement 4 Latter Day Pamphlets is at its core a rebuke of democracy the grand alarming imminent and indisputable Reality of the time 5 rooted in Carlyle s two basic principles of immutable order and eternal laws 6 Carlyle conceived of the work as a sort of prose epic though his original plan to produce twelve pamphlets the number of books associated with such epics as the Aeneid and Paradise Lost may have been coincidental Carlyle s rhetoric echoes the epic form 7 Carlyle announced the theme of his modern epic using the traditional epic question What is Democracy this huge inevitable Product of the Destinies which is everywhere the portion of our Europe in these latter days There lies the question for us Whence comes it this universal big black Democracy whither tends it what is the meaning of it A meaning it must have or it would not be here If we can find the right meaning of it we may wisely submitting or wisely resisting and controlling still hope to live in the midst of it if we cannot find the right meaning if we find only the wrong or no meaning in it to live will not be possible 8 The best known of the pamphlets in the collection is Hudson s Statue an attack on plans to erect a monument to the bankrupted financier George Hudson known as the railway king 9 The pamphlet expresses a central theme of the book the corrosive effects of populist politics and of a culture driven by greed 10 Carlyle also attacked the prison system 11 which he believed to be too liberal and democratic parliamentary government The imaginary figure of Bobus a corrupt sausage maker turned politician first introduced in Past and Present is used to epitomise the ways in which modern commercial culture saps the morality of society Contents EditThe pamphlets 1 are No 1 The Present Time 1 February 1850 No 2 Model Prisons 1 March 1850 No 3 Downing Street 1 April 1850 No 4 The New Downing Street 15 April 1850 No 5 Stump Orator 1 May 1850 No 6 Parliaments 1 June 1850 No 7 Hudson s Statue 1 July 1850 No 8 Jesuitism 1 August 1850 Reception and influence Edit Cartoon by Richard Doyle in Punch 18 1850 Top L R John Russell Carlyle Robert Peel Benjamin Disraeli Bottom L R Godefroi Cavaignac Alphonse de Lamartine Louis Philippe I Napoleon III Hale White remarked that upon publication of the Pamphlets almost all the reviews united in a howl of execration 12 David Masson said that never before was there a publication so provocative of rage hatred and personal malevolence Carlyle s biographer David Alec Wilson wrote that since the letters of Junius nothing so sensational in politics had been printed in England 13 Friedrich Engels reviewed the first two pamphlets in April 1850 14 He approved of Carlyle s criticisms against hereditary aristocracy while harshly criticising Carlyle s views as a thinly disguised acceptance of existing class rule and an unjust exoneration of statism 15 Karl Marx would later attack Carlyle s model prisons and aristocracy of talent in two articles for the New York Daily Tribune appearing in September and October 1853 respectively Anthony Trollope for his part considered that in the Pamphlets the grain of sense is so smothered in a sack of the sheerest trash He has one idea a hatred of spoken and acted falsehood and on this he harps through the whole eight pamphlets 16 A century later Northrop Frye would similarly speak of the work as tantrum prose and rhetorical ectoplasm 17 Ralph Waldo Emerson expressed his appreciation of the work in an August 1850 letter to Carlyle The vivid daguerrotype of the times the next ages will thank you for but the circling baulking Present refuses to be helped 18 Charles Dickens agreed with Carlyle s feeling as expressed in Model Prisons that criminals were being treated better than paupers Dickens echoed Carlyle in an article entitled Pet Prisoners which appeared in Household Words a magazine edited by Dickens 19 John Ruskin wrote in 1862 upon re reading the Pamphlets especially Jesuitism that I can t think what Mr Carlyle wants me to write anything more for if people don t attend to that what more is to be said 20 Carlyle s arguments against the attempt to reform society through the exclusive mechanism of the ballot box impacted Ruskin John Stuart Mill and Charles Kingsley who equally denounced the folly of the mere brute arithmocracy 21 Professor H J C Grierson regarded the Pamphlets as central work in Carlyle s œuvre 22 Carlyle second from right depicted with Frederick Maurice in Ford Madox Brown s painting Work 1865 A woman with a Bobus sandwich board appears to the left of his head In The Present Time Carlyle criticized American democracy What have they done They have doubled their population every twenty years They have begotten with a rapidity beyond recorded example Eighteen Millions of the greatest bores ever seen in this world before that hitherto is their feat in History And so we leave them for the present and cannot predict the success of Democracy on this side of the Atlantic from their example 23 This line provoked a reply from abolitionist Elizur Wright in the form of his own pamphlet Perforations in the Latter Day Pamphlets by One of the Eighteen Millions of Bores it attacked Carlyle as ignorant and reactionary concluding we will take in good part the broad hint to make our calls shorter and less frequent at Cheyne Row 24 Samuel Gray Ward later avoided a visit accordingly Carlyle wrote to Emerson in November 1850 tho Elizur sent me his Pamphlet it is a fact that I have not read a word of it nor shall ever read 25 In his painting Work inspired by the book Ford Madox Brown depicted Carlyle watching honest workers improving the social infrastructure by laying modern drains in a suburb of London while agents of the dishonest Bobus disfigure the area by marketing his political campaign with posters and sandwich boards George Fitzhugh derived the title of Cannibals All or Slaves without Masters 1857 from The Present Time also quoting from it extensively 26 Richard Wagner wrote in Letter to H v Stein 1883 Carlyle has plainly proved to us the natural relation of all Colonies to their mother land referring to The New Downing Street 27 Herbert Agar quoted from The Present Time in the introduction to The Land of the Free 1935 He used an image of Carlyle s to characterize big industry big cities and big government as Enormous Megatherions 28 Notes Edit a b Carlyle Thomas 1850 Latter Day Pamphlets London Chapman amp Hall One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wood James ed 1907 Latter Day Pamphlets The Nuttall Encyclopaedia London and New York Frederick Warne Carlyle T 7 October 1850 TC TO JEAN CARLYLE AITKEN The Carlyle Letters Online 25 1 10 11 doi 10 1215 lt 18500126 TC JCA 01 ISSN 1532 0928 Goldberg amp Seigel 1983 p XLII Carlyle Thomas 1850 Latter Day Pamphlets The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes Vol 20 New York Charles Scribner s Sons published 1903 p 9 Goldberg amp Seigel 1983 p XXIX Seigel 1976 pp 164 173 Carlyle Thomas 1850 Latter Day Pamphlets The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes Vol 20 New York Charles Scribner s Sons published 1903 pp 9 10 Lambert Richard Stanton 1934 The Railway King 1800 1871 London G Allen amp Unwin ltd Cumming Mark 2004 Latter Day Pamphlets In The Carlyle Encyclopedia Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 271 Seigel Jules 1976 Carlyle s Model Prison and Prisoners Identified Victorian Periodicals Newsletter 9 3 pp 81 83 Pages From a Journal by Mark Rutherford www gutenberg org Retrieved 16 July 2022 Goldberg 1976 pp 129 130 Reviews from the Neue Rheinische Zeitung Politish Okonomische Revue No 4 contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels Volume 10 International Publishers New York 1978 pp 301 310 Reviews from the Neue Rheinische Zeitung Politisch Okonomische Revue No 4 contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels Volume 10 p 306 Quoted in M Sadleir Trollope London 1945 p 158 N Frye Anatomy of Criticism Princeton 1971 pp 21 and 325 The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle Ed Joseph Slater New York Columbia University Press 1964 p 461 Dickens Charles 27 April 1850 Pet Prisoners Household Words Vol I London pp 97 103 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Ruskin John 1909 Cook E T Wedderburn Alexander eds The Letters of John Ruskin 1827 1869 The Works of John Ruskin Vol XXXVI London George Allen 156 Charing Cross Road New York Longmans Green and Co p 428 Kingsley Charles 1854 Preface Alton Locke London J M Dent published 1910 p 19 Goldberg amp Seigel 1983 p XIII Carlyle s Latter Day Pamphlets Ed Michael K Goldberg and Jules P Seigel Ottawa Canadian Federation for the Humanities 1983 p 28 The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle Ed Joseph Slater New York Columbia University Press 1964 p 463n The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle Ed Joseph Slater New York Columbia University Press 1964 p 464 Fitzhugh George 1968 Woodward C Vann ed Cannibals All or Slaves without Masters The John Harvard Library Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p xiv Wagner Richard 1994 Religion and Art Translated by Ellis William Ashton Lincoln and London University of Nebraska Press pp 330 331 Karanikas Alexander 1966 Tillers of a Myth Southern Agrarians as Social and Literary Critics Madison University of Wisconsin Press p 80 Bibliography EditCumming Mark ed 2004 The Carlyle Encyclopedia Madison and Teaneck NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3792 0 Goldberg Michael 1976 A Universal howl of execration Carlyle s Latter Day Pamphlets and Their Critical Reception In Clubbe John ed Carlyle and His Contemporaries Essays in Honor of Charles Richard Sanders Durham North Carolina Duke University Press pp 129 147 ISBN 9780822303404 Goldberg M K Seigel J P eds 1983 Carlyle s Latter Day Pamphlets Canadian Federation for the Humanities Seigel Jules P 1976 Latter Day Pamphlets The Near Failure of Form and Vision In Fielding K J Tarr Rodger L eds Carlyle Past and Present A Collection of New Essays Vision Press pp 155 176 ISBN 9780854783731 External links EditLatter Day Pamphlets at Internet Archive Latter Day Pamphlets at Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Latter Day Pamphlets amp oldid 1139660187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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