Lord Acton called it "the most remarkable piece of historical thinking in the language."
G. K. Chesterton considered it along with
Chartism (1839) to be "the work [Carlyle] was chosen by gods and men to achieve".
Past and Present contributed to several social developments in the 19th and early-20th centuries, including the decline of
laissez-faire, the crafting and passage of the
Factory Acts, the
Elementary Education Act 1870 and the
Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act, the emigration of labourers from England to the United States during the
Great Rapprochement, the rise of practices such as
business ethics,
profit sharing, and the
redistribution of income and wealth, the establishment of
state education, and even
playgrounds. Carlyle's influence on modern socialism can be seen most acutely in the response to
Past and Present.
New Moral World, the official newspaper of the
Owenite movement, published a six-part review by its then-editor George Fleming between August and November 1843, further issuing an additional excerpt two months afterwards. Fleming expressed "gratification in finding . . . the true philosophy of Socialism . . . arrayed in the gorgeous and striking drapery of Carlyle
ism." Fleming believed that a "new, unexpected, and powerful ally to our cause has come into the field", finding in the work "identical principles with those of
[Robert Owen]", portraying Carlyle as a covert socialist that has infiltrated the "charmed circle" of high society. In January 1844,
Friedrich Engels published an extensive, laudatory review in the
Deutsch–Französische Jahrbücher. He wrote that Carlyle's acute analysis of the social question in England made it the only book by a contemporary educated Englishman worth reading. Engels praised Carlyle's humanitarian point of view yet considered it only a nonscientific preliminary to socialism. He characterised Carlyle as a German pantheist and a romantic Tory, a follower of
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling rather than of
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, too hung up on religion and the myth of aristocratic leadership to accept freedom and self-determination as the ultimate aim of history, while expressing hope that Carlyle would overcome these limitations. The book greatly influenced the development of
medievalism and the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
John William Mackail wrote that during
William Morris and
Edward Burne-Jones' days at
Oxford, "Carlyle's
Past and Present stood alongside of
Modern Painters as inspired and absolute truth."
John Ruskin gifted his personal, extensively annotated copy to a friend in 1887, along with a letter in which he called it "a book which I read no more because it has become a part of myself, and my old marks in it are now useless, because in my heart I mark it all."
Fors Clavigera has been called "in effect the resumption of the concerns of Carlyle's
Past and Present in another form." ==References==