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
... Look over the whole history of its degradation & find what odious vice, what sottish & debasing enormity the degenerate naughtiness of man has never crouched unto & adored. To things animate & things inanimate, to the ghosts of dead men ...
... Look over the whole history of its degradation & find what odious vice, what sottish & debasing enormity the degenerate naughtiness of man has never crouched unto & adored. To things animate & things inanimate, to the ghosts of dead men ...
Strana
... Look next from the history of my intellect to the history of my heart. A blank, my lord. I have not the kind affections of a pigeon. Ungenerous & selfish, cautious & cold, I yet wish to be romantic. Have not sufficient feeling to speak ...
... Look next from the history of my intellect to the history of my heart. A blank, my lord. I have not the kind affections of a pigeon. Ungenerous & selfish, cautious & cold, I yet wish to be romantic. Have not sufficient feeling to speak ...
Strana
... look less like a monument & more like a man. I can't persuade that willful brother Edward of mine to use the same sovereign nostrum. If I have written but five lines & find a silly uneasiness in my chest or in my narvous system to use ...
... look less like a monument & more like a man. I can't persuade that willful brother Edward of mine to use the same sovereign nostrum. If I have written but five lines & find a silly uneasiness in my chest or in my narvous system to use ...
Strana
... looks & words constitute religion, which the devout man would find hindrances. And so we go, trying always to weld the finite & infinite, the absolute & the seeming, together. On the contrary the manner in which religion is most ...
... looks & words constitute religion, which the devout man would find hindrances. And so we go, trying always to weld the finite & infinite, the absolute & the seeming, together. On the contrary the manner in which religion is most ...
Strana
... look friendly to me. How remote from my knowledge, how alien, yet how kind does it make the cause of Causes appear! The stimulated curiosity of the father sees the graces & instincts which exist, indeed, in every babe, but unnoticed in ...
... look friendly to me. How remote from my knowledge, how alien, yet how kind does it make the cause of Causes appear! The stimulated curiosity of the father sees the graces & instincts which exist, indeed, in every babe, but unnoticed in ...
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