Ralph Waldo Emerson: A Collection of Critical EssaysLawrence Buell Prentice Hall, 1993 - 218 páginas For all Literature and/or Literary Criticism courses.
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Página 28
... answer to the question of motives is probably not possible as yet . Why Waldo and Margaret in the 1820's and ' 30's should instinctively have revolted against a creed that had at last been perfected as the ideology of their own group ...
... answer to the question of motives is probably not possible as yet . Why Waldo and Margaret in the 1820's and ' 30's should instinctively have revolted against a creed that had at last been perfected as the ideology of their own group ...
Página 142
... answer questions which I have not skill to put . One man answers some question which none of his contemporaries put , and is isolated " ( W 4 : 6-7 ) . There is something special here , but so undramatic it is hard to catch . In the ...
... answer questions which I have not skill to put . One man answers some question which none of his contemporaries put , and is isolated " ( W 4 : 6-7 ) . There is something special here , but so undramatic it is hard to catch . In the ...
Página 196
... answer to skepticism [ which Emerson meant it to do ] . The answer does not consist in denying the conclusion of skepticism but in reconceiving its truth . It is true that we do not know the existence of the world with certainty ; our ...
... answer to skepticism [ which Emerson meant it to do ] . The answer does not consist in denying the conclusion of skepticism but in reconceiving its truth . It is true that we do not know the existence of the world with certainty ; our ...
Conteúdo
BACKGROUNDS | 13 |
From Franklin to Emerson | 32 |
Emerson in His Cultural Context | 48 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Termos e frases comuns
actual Address allegory American answer appears audience becomes better Boston called character Cincinnati course critical culture Daily difference divine early Edwards Emerson Emersonian England essay example experience expression fact figure force Franklin give Harvard human idea ideal images imagination individualism influence intellectual interest journal language later lecture less liberal literary living look means Miller mind moral nature never original passage period philosophy political position practical present provides published Puritan question radical Ralph Waldo Emerson reader reason reference relation religious representative revisions rhetoric Scholar seems Self-Reliance sense sentence social society soul speak spirit studies success theory things thinking Thoreau thought tion tone tradition true understanding Unitarian University Press virtue voice whole writing York young