Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881) is a classic author whose works are in the public domain.

Carlyle's radical thesis argues that history pivots on outsized individuals—poets, prophets, and kings—whose vision reshapes entire civilizations, making this a manifesto for why greatness matters more than systems. His passionate, almost biblical prose style mirrors his argument, proving that how we speak about heroes fundamentally shapes how we understand change.

Carlyle transforms the Revolution from textbook event into a towering human drama of passion, chaos, and consequence, making history feel like lived catastrophe rather than settled fact.
