The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: English traitsHoughton, Mifflin, 1884 |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 18
Página 24
... look at it again . Carlyle he said wrote most obscurely . He was clever and deep , but he defied the sympa- thies of every body . Even Mr. Coleridge wrote more clearly , though he had always wished Cole- ridge would write more to be ...
... look at it again . Carlyle he said wrote most obscurely . He was clever and deep , but he defied the sympa- thies of every body . Even Mr. Coleridge wrote more clearly , though he had always wished Cole- ridge would write more to be ...
Página 31
... looks into a port . Then that wonderful esprit du corps by which we adopt into our self - love every thing we touch , makes us all champions of her sailing qualities . The conscious ship hears all the praise . In one week she has made ...
... looks into a port . Then that wonderful esprit du corps by which we adopt into our self - love every thing we touch , makes us all champions of her sailing qualities . The conscious ship hears all the praise . In one week she has made ...
Página 32
... Look , what egg - shells are drifting all over it , each one , like ours , filled with men in ecstasies of terror , alter- nating with cockney conceit , as the sea is rough or smooth . Is this sad - colored circle an eternal ceme- tery ...
... Look , what egg - shells are drifting all over it , each one , like ours , filled with men in ecstasies of terror , alter- nating with cockney conceit , as the sea is rough or smooth . Is this sad - colored circle an eternal ceme- tery ...
Página 49
... look to find in the son every mental and moral property that existed in the ancestor . In race , it is not the broad shoulders , or litheness , or stature that give advantage , but a symmetry that reaches As far as to the wit . Then the ...
... look to find in the son every mental and moral property that existed in the ancestor . In race , it is not the broad shoulders , or litheness , or stature that give advantage , but a symmetry that reaches As far as to the wit . Then the ...
Página 66
... look slight and undersized beside them , and invalids . They are bigger men than the Americans . I sup- pose a hundred English taken at random out of the street would weigh a fourth more than so many Americans . Yet , I am told , the ...
... look slight and undersized beside them , and invalids . They are bigger men than the Americans . I sup- pose a hundred English taken at random out of the street would weigh a fourth more than so many Americans . Yet , I am told , the ...
Outras edições - Ver todos
The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: English traits Ralph Waldo Emerson,James Elliot Cabot Visualização completa - 1884 |
Termos e frases comuns
American Bacon beauty better bishop Britain British Carlyle Celt Chartist church civil courage Duke Duke of Wellington England English English nature Englishman Europe eyes force French genius gentleman Geoffrey of Monmouth give Gothic art Greek heart Heimskringla honor horses hundred Inigo Jones island king labor land learned lish live London look Lord Lord Collingwood Lord Eldon manners ment miles mills mind nation nature never noble opinion Oxford Parliament persons plain Plato poetry poets political praise race religion rich Saxon scholars secret Shakspeare ship Sir Philip Sidney society steam stone Stonehenge strength talent taste temperament thing thought thousand tion told tone trade traits truth walk wealth Wellington whilst Wordsworth write York minster