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  1. Virginia Woolf believed that Jane Welsh Carlyle was one of the greatest letter writers, describing her “hawk-like swoop and descent of her mind upon facts. Nothing escapes her. She sees through ...

  2. orlando.cambridge.org › people › 6b535565-ffb3-4ed2Jane Welsh Carlyle | Orlando

    Christianson, Aileen. “Jane Welsh Carlyle’s Private Writing Career”. A History of Scottish Women’s Writing, edited by Douglas Gifford and Dorothy McMillan, Edinburgh University Press, pp. 232-45.

  3. Fortunate indeed the person who purloined the letters of a woman of De Quincey’s acquaintance, Jane Welsh Carlyle (1801–66). And that’s not just my opinion: she is now identified by the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography as almost indisputably the “greatest woman letter writer in English.”

  4. 4 de set. de 2018 · Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle. By Jane Welsh Carlyle, 1801-1866. Edited by Thomas Carlyle, 1795-1881 and James Anthony Froude 1818-1894. London: Longmans, Green, And Co., 1883. gender, ethnicity, religion

  5. Scottish writer and historian Thomas Carlyle and his wife, Jane Welsh Carlyle, attracted to them a circle of foreign exiles, radicals, feminists, revolutionaries, and major and minor writers from across Europe and the United States. The collection is regarded as one of the finest and most comprehensive literary archives of the nineteenth century.

  6. 3 de mai. de 2017 · Jane Welsh was born and raised in Scotland. In 1826, she married Thomas Carlyle. As Thomas’ literary career began to soar, they moved to London, where they socialized with numerous prominent thinkers, among them Ralph Waldo Emerson, Charles Dickens, Alfred Tennyson, William Makepeace Thackeray, Frédéric Chopin, and the women’s advocate Geraldine Jewsbury, who became Jane’s close friend.

  7. 1 de set. de 2022 · A biography of Jane Welsh Carlyle (1801-1866), the wife of essayist Thomas known for her "marvelous letters."A longtime professor at the City University of New York, Chamberlain has lectured and published numerous essays on Carlyle, widely regarded as one of England's great masters of the epistolary, a literary form of writing as much confessional as novelistic.