Ralph Waldo EmersonThe Minerva Group, Inc., 2002 - 456 páginas So writes the man whose life we are to pass in review, and it is certainly as true of him as of any author we could name. He delineates himself so perfectly in his various writings that the careful reader sees his nature just as it was in all its essentials, and has little more to learn than those human accidents which individualize him in space and time. |
Conteúdo
Introduction | 1 |
18031823 | 37 |
18231828 | 48 |
18281833 | 55 |
18331838 | 62 |
18381843 | 116 |
18431848 | 179 |
18481853 | 193 |
18581863 | 224 |
18631868 | 240 |
18681873 | 249 |
18731878 | 280 |
18781882 | 294 |
Emersons Poems | 310 |
Recollections of Emersons Last Years | 343 |
Emerson A Retrospect | 357 |
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Address American Atlantic Monthly beauty believe Boston brother called Carlyle Channing chapter character Charles Charles Chauncy Christian church College Concord delivered discourse divine doctrine Emer Emerson says Emerson's poems England Essay expression eyes Father feeling genius give Goethe heart human idea inspiration intellectual James Freeman Clarke knew lectures letter lines listened literary living look Lowell Margaret Fuller memory ment Milton mind minister moral nature never noble Over-Soul passage persons Phi Beta Kappa philosopher Plato Plotinus Plutarch poet poetical poetry preached prose published pulpit quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson reader remember Reverend Sartor Resartus scholar seems sense sentence sermon Shakespeare society soul speaks spirit spoken sweet teach Theodore Parker things Thoreau thou thought tion town Transcendentalist truth ture Unitarian verse voice volume William Emerson words writing young