Selected Writings of Ralph Waldo EmersonPenguin, 7. 6. 2011 - Počet stran: 576 A classic collection of critical essays, poems, and letters from one of the greatest minds of nineteenth-century America. |
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Strana
... become a landlady to support her five sons. After working his way through Harvard, the author suffered first from temporary loss of vision in one eye, then from a lung disease; later he was to experience the early deaths of his first ...
... become a landlady to support her five sons. After working his way through Harvard, the author suffered first from temporary loss of vision in one eye, then from a lung disease; later he was to experience the early deaths of his first ...
Strana
... becomes,” and for both the soul and nature, “There is never a beginning, there is never an end, to the inexplicable continuity of this web of God, but always circular power returning into itself. Therein it resembles his own spirit ...
... becomes,” and for both the soul and nature, “There is never a beginning, there is never an end, to the inexplicable continuity of this web of God, but always circular power returning into itself. Therein it resembles his own spirit ...
Strana
... becomes junior pastor at the Second Church (Unitarian) in Boston; marries Ellen Tucker (1829) and loses her in death from tuberculosis (1831). He resigns his pastorate; suffers from weak health; travels to Italy, France, England, and ...
... becomes junior pastor at the Second Church (Unitarian) in Boston; marries Ellen Tucker (1829) and loses her in death from tuberculosis (1831). He resigns his pastorate; suffers from weak health; travels to Italy, France, England, and ...
Strana
... become heavily dependent upon his daughter Ellen and his friend James Elliot Cabot for literary judgment. For the dating of most of the poems I have relied on Edward Waldo Emerson's notes in the Centenary Edition and upon the work of ...
... become heavily dependent upon his daughter Ellen and his friend James Elliot Cabot for literary judgment. For the dating of most of the poems I have relied on Edward Waldo Emerson's notes in the Centenary Edition and upon the work of ...
Strana
... become of me? We forget ourselves & our destinies in health, & the chief use of temporary sickness is to remind us of these concerns. I must improve my time better. I must prepare myself for the great profession I have purposed to ...
... become of me? We forget ourselves & our destinies in health, & the chief use of temporary sickness is to remind us of these concerns. I must improve my time better. I must prepare myself for the great profession I have purposed to ...
Obsah
Nature | |
The American Scholar | |
Divinity School Address | |
Selfreliance | |
The Oversoul | |
Circles | |
Politics | |
Montaigne or the Sceptic | |
Fate | |
Illusions | |
Thoreau | |
Education | |
Grace | |
The Humblebee | |
The Poet | |
Experience | |
Give All to Love | |
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action animal appear astronomy atheism beauty become behold believe better character church Concord conversation divine Divinity School Address earth Emerson eternal expression fact faith fancy Fate fear feel genius give Goethe hear heart heaven Henry David Thoreau hope hour human immortal intellect lecture light limp band live look man’s Margaret Fuller matter means mind Montaigne moral nature never night numbers objects party perception perfect persons philosophy plants Plato Plotinus Plutarch poem poet poetry politics race Ralph Waldo Emerson reason religion scholar secret seems sense sentiment slavery society soul speak spirit stand stars tell thee things Thoreau thou thought true truth universal virtue Walden Pond Waldo Whigs whilst whole wisdom wise wish words write Yoganidra young