A person whose occupation is making and altering garments.
1Sartor insisted the decision was temporary and could be revisited in two months.
2In 'Sartor Resartus': Everlasting No, The Center of Indifference, and The Everlasting Yea.
3His name is Sartor, and I owe him a good deal of money.
4Her present was on the sideboard, a book called 'Sartor Resartus.'
5They are, perhaps, the only true words in Sartor Resartus.
6The author of the "Sartor Resartus" did not care for titles.
7It contains an extraordinary collection of royal clothes (what would Sartor Resartus say?
8I expect you read that in Carlyle's 'Sartor Resartus.'
9In San Francisco-butthe adequate story, the Sartor Resartus-theWorld as Canes, remains to be written.
10There is much fanciful, grotesque description in "Sartor," with deep thought and beautiful imagery.
11Why, I had like to have choked upon "Sartor Resartus."
12The moral influence of dress has not been overrated even by Carlyle's Professor in his Sartor Resartus.
13Jessie Cumming and Mary Spence shook hands and formed a friendship over Carlyle's "Sartor Resartus."
14Sartor Resartus, French Revolution, Essays on History, Signs of the Times, Characteristics, Burns, Scott, Voltaire, and Goethe.
15He is the total optimist, says the nuggety Sartor over tea and biscuits in his still-leafy garden.
16Witness the sport over Ruskin's "Munera Pulveris," and the scornful reception given Carlyle's "Sartor Resartus."