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The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol II. by Ralph Waldo Emerson;Thomas Carlyle
page 61 of 327 (18%)
stood, was succeeded by Nickerson; these are the names of the
parties. And so, dear Friend; accept this munificent sum of
Money; and expect a blessing with it if good wishes from the
heart of man can give one. So much for that.

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* The Reverend Henry Colman.
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Did you receive a Dumfries Newspaper with a criticism in it? The
author is one Gilfillan, a young Dissenting Minister in Dundee;
a person of great talent, ingenuousness, enthusiasm, and other
virtues; whose position as a Preacher of bare old Calvinism
under penalty of death sometimes makes me tremble for him. He
has written in that same Newspaper about all the notablest men of
his time; Godwin, Corn-law Elliott and I know not all whom: if
he publish the Book, I will take care to send it you.* I saw the
man for the first time last autumn, at Dumfries; as I said, his
being a Calvinist Dissenting Minister, economically fixed, and
spiritually with such germinations in him, forces me to be very
reserved to him.

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* The sketches were published the next year in a volume under
the title of _The Gallery of Literary Portraits._
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John Sterling's _Dial_ shall be forwarded to Ventnor in the Isle
of Wight, whenever it arrives. He was here, as probably I told
you, about two months ago, the old unresting brilliantly
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