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The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol II. by Ralph Waldo Emerson;Thomas Carlyle
page 262 of 327 (80%)
human voice to me in the world; and that you are it, and have
been,--thanks to you, whether you speak or not! Let me say also,
while I am at it, that the few words you sent me about those
first Two volumes are present with me in the far more frightful
darknesses of these last Two; and indeed are often almost my one
encouragement. That is a fact, and not exaggerated, though you
think it is. I read some criticisms of my wretched Book, and
hundreds of others I in the gross refused to read; they were in
praise, they were in blame; but not one of them looked into the
eyes of the object, and in genuine human fashion responded to its
human strivings, and recognized it,--completely right, though
with generous exaggeration! That was well done, I can tell you:
a human voice, far out in the waste deeps, among the inarticulate
sea-krakens and obscene monsters, loud-roaring, inexpressibly
ugly, dooming you as if to eternal solitude by way of wages,--
"hath exceeding much refreshment in it," as my friend Oliver used
to say.

Having not one spare moment at present, I will answer to _you_
only the whole contents of that letter; you in your charity will
convey to Mr. Wight what portion belongs to him. Wight, if you
have a chance of him, is worth knowing; a genuine bit of metal,
too thin and ringing for my tastes (hammered, in fact, upon the
Yankee anvils), but recognizably of steel and with a keen fire-
edge. Pray signify to him that he has done a thing agreeable to
me, and that it will be pleasant if I find it will not hurt
_him._ Profit to me out of it, except to keep his own soul clear
and sound (to his own sense, as it always will be to mine), is
perfectly indifferent; and on the whole I thank him heartily for
showing me a chivalrous human brother, instead of the usual
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