Emerson, Romanticism, and Intuitive Reason: The Transatlantic "light of All Our Day"University of Missouri Press, 2005 - 555 páginas "Comparative study in transatlantic Romanticism that traces the links between German idealism, British Romanticism (Wordsworth, Coleridge, Carlyle), and American Transcendentalism. Focuses on Emerson's development and use of the concept of intuitive Reason, which became the intellectual and emotional foundation of American Transcendentalism"--Provided by publisher. |
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Página viii
... Hope:The Deaths of Ellen and Edward 425 13. Mourning Becomes Morning:The Death of Charles 447 14. Wordsworth's Ode,Waldo, and “Threnody” 472 Appendix: “Laodamia” and “Dion” Bibliography Index 512 521 543 Acknowledgments The original ...
... Hope:The Deaths of Ellen and Edward 425 13. Mourning Becomes Morning:The Death of Charles 447 14. Wordsworth's Ode,Waldo, and “Threnody” 472 Appendix: “Laodamia” and “Dion” Bibliography Index 512 521 543 Acknowledgments The original ...
Página x
... hope, to complete and alter Blake's axiom, that I bear in the book that follows—if for no other reason than to properly honor my own shaping influences and benefactors—some semblance of a “plentiful harvest.” There is a more general ...
... hope, to complete and alter Blake's axiom, that I bear in the book that follows—if for no other reason than to properly honor my own shaping influences and benefactors—some semblance of a “plentiful harvest.” There is a more general ...
Página xi
... hope we suffer and we mourn.” I also read her a journal entry in which Emerson—having had a troubling dream, a ... hope—for it is “not without hope we suffer and we mourn”— that my mother's spirit,like Wordsworth's “Song” in the great ...
... hope we suffer and we mourn.” I also read her a journal entry in which Emerson—having had a troubling dream, a ... hope—for it is “not without hope we suffer and we mourn”— that my mother's spirit,like Wordsworth's “Song” in the great ...
Página 18
... hope we suffer and we mourn.” The Appendix offers brief analyses of the two Wordsworth poems that Emerson consistently ranked second only to the Intimations Ode, “Laodamia” and “Dion.” Readers are entitled to some initial clarification ...
... hope we suffer and we mourn.” The Appendix offers brief analyses of the two Wordsworth poems that Emerson consistently ranked second only to the Intimations Ode, “Laodamia” and “Dion.” Readers are entitled to some initial clarification ...
Página 20
... hope, to those who read these pages. Part I PRELIMINARIES A Chapter 1 Introduction THE CRITICS AND. society.” Emerson was “really an anarchist; necessarily so, since he cultivated the thrill of glorifying his own mind and refused to let ...
... hope, to those who read these pages. Part I PRELIMINARIES A Chapter 1 Introduction THE CRITICS AND. society.” Emerson was “really an anarchist; necessarily so, since he cultivated the thrill of glorifying his own mind and refused to let ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
23 | |
46 | |
80 | |
Chapter 4 Emersons Discipleship | 118 |
Chapter 5 Powers and Pulsations | 153 |
Chapter 6 Intuition and Tuition | 184 |
Chapter 7 Passivity and Activity | 223 |
Chapter 10 Emerson among the Orphic Poets | 355 |
Chapter 11 Emersonian Optimism and The Stream of Tendency | 397 |
Chapter 12 Wordsworthian Hope | 425 |
Chapter 13 Mourning Becomes Morning | 447 |
Chapter 14 Wordsworths OdeWaldo and Threnody | 472 |
Appendix LAODAMIA AND DION | 512 |
Bibliography | 521 |
Index | 543 |
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Termos e frases comuns
active added American assertion beauty become called Carlyle chapter cited Coleridge Coleridge’s comes course creative criticism death described distinction divine earlier early earth echoing edition Emer Emerson Emersonian especially essay eternal Excursion experience fact feel final find first genius give heart heaven hope human ideas imagination immortality individual influence insists Intimations Ode intuitive italics journal knowledge language later least lecture less letter light lines live look lost matter means Milton mind moral nature never Nietzsche notes object once opening original passage past philosophy poem poet poetry polarity political present quoted readers Reason refers Reflection remarks response Romantic says Scholar seems Self-Reliance sense soul spirit stanza texts things thought tion true truth turn understanding universe vision whole Wordsworth Wordsworthian writing