Abstract

The Last of Edward Carpenter

Ratcliffe, S. K. | July 31, 1929 issue

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Edward Carpenter, democratic author and poet, as he described himself, was the most remarkable of those few original English characters who are known and honored among certain orders of the elect throughout the world. He had died three days before in Guildford, England. On his seventieth birthday, and again on his eightieth, tributes of admiration and affection had been paid to him, by men of letters and of affairs, by labor and socialist leaders, by bands of social idealists belonging to the small undefeated minority, by inconspicuous men and women who, in places scattered over the globe, had been reached by the word of Edward Carpenter.

See Also:

CARPENTER, Edward; AUTHORS; SOCIALISTS; LABOR; GUILDFORD (England); ENGLAND
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