[Chapter 3, note 13, of the author's
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[Chapter 3, note 13, of the author's
Several years earlier, DeQuincey had made almost identical objections to Carlyle's translation of Wilhelm Meister, complaining of its "lawless innovation," "licentious coinages," and "neoteric slang" (192-97). Anticipating the defense of Sartor's style discussed below, Carlyle inscribed this episode in Sartor Resartus (Vanden Bossche, "Polite Conversation"). It is an index of Carlyle's own accommodation to English culture that he later conceded that DeQuiricey had been right to admonish him (Shepherd, 2:276).
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