id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_sr3h4nihvvfrpbokce5cew6ofy Jan Marten Ivo Klaver Jean Paul, Carlyle and Kingsley: The Romantic Tradition in Alton Locke's Dreamland 2004.0 8 .pdf application/pdf 3686 273 78 Jean Paul, Carlyle and Kingsley: following stages Alton has to go through in the second part of the dream are 1966:6,69) Kingsley, who always showed genuine interest in German literature, had most likely read Richter�s works or knew about them through Carlyle, who wrote two essays on the German author in the 1830s, including a For example, in the �Rede des todten Christus�in Siebenkäs, the dream Carlyle translated for his 1830 essay on Jean Paul, Christ des todten Christus� distilled in Sartor Resartus, Alton�s dream also seems to In a later dream in Siebenkäs a character is, like Alton, laid up with a These examples seem to indicate that Kingsley was indeed much influenced by Jean Paul�s Traumdichtungen, as the reviewer in Blackwood�s Edinburgh Magazine maintained, but to say that these dream passages were �copied With Alton�s dream Kingsley returned to the structure of Sartor Resartus Kingsley, Charles (1850), Alton Locke: Tailor and Poet. ./cache/work_sr3h4nihvvfrpbokce5cew6ofy.pdf ./txt/work_sr3h4nihvvfrpbokce5cew6ofy.txt