Page:Sartor Resartus (1831, Carlyle).djvu/239

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INDEX.

  • Action the true end of Man, 108, in.
  • Actual, the, the true Ideal, 135, 136.
  • Adamitism, 39.
  • Afflictions, merciful, 133.
  • Ambition, 71.
  • Apprenticeships, 84.
  • Aprons, use and significance of, 29.
  • Art, all true Works of, symbolic, 154.
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  • Baphometic Fire-baptism, 117.
  • Battle-field, a, 119.
  • Battle, Life-, our, 59; with Folly and Sin, 86, 88.
  • Being, the boundless Phantasmagoria of, 36.
  • Belief and Opinion, 134, 135.
  • Bible of Universal History, 122, 134.
  • Biography, meaning and uses of, 51; significance of biographic facts, 139.
  • Blumine, 95; her environment, 96; character, and relation to Teufelsdrockh, 97; blissful bonds rent asunder, 100; on her way to England, 106.
  • Bolivar's Cavalry-uniform, 33.
  • Books, influence of, 119, 137.
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  • Childhood, happy season of, 61; early influences and sports, 63.
  • Christian Faith, a good Mother's simple version of the, 68; Temple of the, now in ruins, 133; Passive-half of, 134.
  • Christian Love, 130, 132.
  • Church -Clothes, 147; living and dead
  • Churches, 148; the modern Church and its Newspaper-Pulpits, 174.
  • Circumstances, influence of, 64,
  • Clergy, the, with their surplices and cassock-aprons girt-on, 29, 145.
  • Clothes, not a spontaneous growth of the human animal, but an artificial device, 2; analogy between the Costumes of the body and the Customs of the spirit, 23; Decoration the first purpose of Clothes, 26; what Clothes have done for us, and what they threaten to do, 27, 38; fantastic garbs of the Middle Ages, 31; a simple costume, 33; tangible and mystic influences of Clothes, 34, 40; animal and human Clothing contrasted, 37; a Court-Ceremonial minus Clothes, 41; necessity for Clothes, 43; transparent Clothes, 45; all Emblematic things are Clothes, 49, 187; Genesis of the modern Clothes-Philosopher, 53; Character and conditions needed, 141, 143; George Fox's suit of Leather, 144; Church-Clothes, 147; Old-Clothes, 165; practical inferences, 188.
  • Codification, 46.
  • Combination, value of, 92, 204.
  • Commons, British House of, 28.
  • Concealment. See Secrecy.
  • Constitution, our invaluable British, 173.
  • Conversion, 136.
  • Courtesy, due to all men, 165.
  • Courtier, a luckless, 33.
  • Custom the greatest of Weavers, 179.
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  • Dandy, mystic significance of the, 188; dandy worship, 190; sacred books, 191; articles of faith, 193; a dandy household, 197; tragically undermined by growing Drudgery, 198.
  • Death, nourishment even in, 73, 116.
  • Devil, internecine war with the, 8, 82, 117, 127; cannot now so much as believe in him, 115.
  • Dilettantes and Pedants, 47; patrons of Literature, 87.
  • Diogenes, 146.
  • Doubt can only be removed by Action, 135. See Unbelief.
  • Drudgery contrasted with Dandyism, 103; 'Communion of Drudges,' and what may come of it, 198.
  • Duelling, a picture of, 125.
  • Duty, no longer a divine Messenger and Guide, but a false earthly Fantasm, 112, 113; infinite nature of, 135.
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  • Editor's first acquaintance with Teufelsdröckh and his Philosophy of Clothes, 4; efforts to make known his discovery to British readers, 5; admitted into the
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