[1] Reminiscences, vol. i. p. 141.
[2] Reminiscences, vol. i. p. 142.
[3] Reminiscences, vol. ii. p. 69.
[4] Reminiscences, vol. ii. pp. 18, 19.
[5] Now 2 Spey Street.
[6] Masson's 'Edinburgh Sketches and Memories,' pp. 329-30.
[7] Reminiscences, vol. ii. p. 30.
[8] Reminiscences, vol. ii. p. 31.
[9] Reminiscences, vol. ii. pp. 40, 41.
[10] Reminiscences, vol. ii. pp. 161, 162.
[11] Reminiscences, vol. ii. p. 47.
[12] Reminiscences, vol. ii. p. 162.
[13] Reminiscences, vol. i. p. 19.
[14] Reminiscences, vol. i. p. 6.
[15] Reminiscences, vol. ii. pp. 178-79.
[16] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. p. 20.
[17] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. p. 24.
[18] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. p. 115.
[19] Froude's "Life in London," vol. i. pp. 161-62.
[20] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. p. 420.
[21] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. pp. 433-4.
[22] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. p. 441.
[23] Ibid., vol. i. p. 451.
[24] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. i. p. 456.
[25] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 26.
[26] Ibid., vol. ii. p. 36.
[27] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 43.
[28] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. pp. 142-45.
[29] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. pp. 156-7.
[30] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 245.
[31] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 295.
[32] Masson's 'Carlyle Personally and in his Writings,' pp. 27-9.
[33] Alexander Smith's 'Sketches and Criticisms,' pp. 101-8.
[34] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 312.
[35] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 314.
[36] Larkin's 'Carlyle and the Open Secret of his Life,' pp. 334-5.
[37] 'Life of Jane Welsh Carlyle,' pp. 191-2.
[38] After reading the above estimate in the proof sheets, Professor Masson writes to me as follows:—
'May I hint that, in the passage about his character and domestic relations, you seem hardly to do justice to the depths of real kindness and tenderness in him, and the actual couthiness of his manner and fireside conversation in his most genial hours? He was delightful and loveable at such hours, with a fund of the raciest Scottish humour.'
This is a side of Carlyle's nature which would naturally be hidden from the general reader, and from Mr Froude. It is easy to imagine how Carlyle's genial humour, frozen at its source in the company of the solemnly pessimistic Froude, should be thawed by the presence of 'a brither Scot.'
[39] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. p. 346.
[40] Froude's 'Life in London,' vol. ii. pp. 408-9.
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