Welsh Journals

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remember'. Finally, in following Carlyle's journeys into Wales the 'family of humanity' has increased, and it is a notable fact that so many of its illustrious members were intimately associated with Wales. The story of Welsh influence on English thought in the nineteenth century still remains to be written. The above notes are based on the following works: The Life of John Sterling, by Thomas Carlyle; The Red Dragon, Vol. V, 1884, which con- tains three articles, by the late John Howells of St. Athan, in which were published, for the first time, a large selection of the correspondence between Carlyle and Charles Redwood; The Athenaeum, 1851, pp. 1088-90, containing a contemporary review of The Life of John Sterling. MOELWYN I. WILLIAMS.