Ralph Waldo Emerson: Philosopher and PoetD. Appleton, 1901 - 327 páginas |
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Página 32
... hour with his household . " He thus proceeds : TEMPORARY DESIGN OF THE RITE . " I see natural feeling and beauty in such language from Jesus - a friend to his friends . I can readily im- agine that he was willing and desirous , when his ...
... hour with his household . " He thus proceeds : TEMPORARY DESIGN OF THE RITE . " I see natural feeling and beauty in such language from Jesus - a friend to his friends . I can readily im- agine that he was willing and desirous , when his ...
Página 48
... hour , but find it impossible to recall the largest part of his discourse , which was often like so many printed paragraphs in his book - perhaps the same - so readily did he fall into cer- tain commonplaces . As I might have foreseen ...
... hour , but find it impossible to recall the largest part of his discourse , which was often like so many printed paragraphs in his book - perhaps the same - so readily did he fall into cer- tain commonplaces . As I might have foreseen ...
Página 58
... hour every day ; and that is all that the Londoner knows or wishes to know of the subject . But it turns out good men . ' He named certain individuals , especially one man of letters , his friend , the best man he knew , whom London had ...
... hour every day ; and that is all that the Londoner knows or wishes to know of the subject . But it turns out good men . ' He named certain individuals , especially one man of letters , his friend , the best man he knew , whom London had ...
Página 60
... hours of genial discourse at Craigenputtoch , Carlyle and Emerson never saw each other again until 1848. During the inter- vening almost twenty years the position of the two men had materially changed . Both had passed the noonday of ...
... hours of genial discourse at Craigenputtoch , Carlyle and Emerson never saw each other again until 1848. During the inter- vening almost twenty years the position of the two men had materially changed . Both had passed the noonday of ...
Página 78
... hour and the man that now is : to the eternal revela- tion in the heart . Thus was he a true man . Having seen that the Law in us is commanding , he would not suffer it to be commanded . Boldly , with hand and heart and life , he ...
... hour and the man that now is : to the eternal revela- tion in the heart . Thus was he a true man . Having seen that the Law in us is commanding , he would not suffer it to be commanded . Boldly , with hand and heart and life , he ...
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Termos e frases comuns
action appears beauty Carlyle Celts Chartism Church compensation discourse divine doctrine earth Emer Emerson England English nature English Traits Englishman essay eternal Europe existence expression facts faith feel friendship genius gives Goethe Greek heart heaven Hermann Grimm hour human idea ideal ideal theory immortality infinite Infinite Mind intellectual Jesus land less light live look manners matter means mind Montaigne moral nation Nature never noble nomadism Norsemen passages perfect persons philosophy Plato Plotinus poems poet poetry prayer preacher present prudence race Ralph Waldo Emerson relation religion seems sense sentiment society soul speak spirit stand stars Stonehenge Swedenborg theory things thou thought tion to-day transcendentalist true truth unity universe virtue wealth whole William of Wykeham wisdom wise Wittem words write Xenophon Zoroaster