Latter-day Pamphlets: Issues 3-4; Issues 7-8

· Cosimo Classics
Ebook
308
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About this ebook

"There is but one thing needed for the world, but that one is indispensable-Justice..."

-Thomas Carlyle, Latter-Day Pamphlets (1850)


Latter-Day Pamphlets (1850) by Thomas Carlyle is a series of essays, many of which are concerned with the effect of greed on the culture. The book harshly denounces the British parliament, democracy, the prison system, and other social injustices; however, it failed to garner the approval of the British public. Among the most memorable of the essays are "The Present Time," "Stump-Orator," "Hudson's Statue," and "Parliaments."



About the author

THOMAS CARLYLE (1795-1881), Scottish historian and writer, is remembered today for dubbing economics "the dismal science," but in his day he was widely known-and often controversial-for his criticism of the "progress" of the Industrial Revolution, for his satires in the vein of Jonathan Swift, and for his championing of German Romantic poetry to English readers.

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