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
... virtue, to forget the things behind & press toward those before.” He was, indeed, in every sense of the word, a Transcendentalist—a moral, a good, and a wise man—fighting from one address to the next for his intractable belief in “the ...
... virtue, to forget the things behind & press toward those before.” He was, indeed, in every sense of the word, a Transcendentalist—a moral, a good, and a wise man—fighting from one address to the next for his intractable belief in “the ...
Strana
... virtues & graces; where manners are such an aristocratic element, why not theirs? They are not in a hurry, they have dignity, grace, repose. They have produced some persons of ability.” That same year slavery's violation of reason and ...
... virtues & graces; where manners are such an aristocratic element, why not theirs? They are not in a hurry, they have dignity, grace, repose. They have produced some persons of ability.” That same year slavery's violation of reason and ...
Strana
... virtue! I need excitement. March 25, 1821. I am. June 19, 1820. ... I love the picturesque glitter of a summer morning's landscape; it kindles this burning admiration of nature & enthusiasm of mind. November, 1830. ... God finds his ...
... virtue! I need excitement. March 25, 1821. I am. June 19, 1820. ... I love the picturesque glitter of a summer morning's landscape; it kindles this burning admiration of nature & enthusiasm of mind. November, 1830. ... God finds his ...
Strana
Ralph Waldo Emerson William H. Gilman. it virtue! I need excitement. March 25, 1821. I am sick—if I should die what would become of me? We forget ourselves & our destinies in health, & the chief use of temporary sickness is to remind us ...
Ralph Waldo Emerson William H. Gilman. it virtue! I need excitement. March 25, 1821. I am sick—if I should die what would become of me? We forget ourselves & our destinies in health, & the chief use of temporary sickness is to remind us ...
Strana
... virtues, the words & deeds they call glory & shame,—I disclaim them all. I say to the Universe, Mighty one! thou art not my mother; Return to chaos, if thou wilt, I shall still exist. I live. If I owe my being, it is to a destiny ...
... virtues, the words & deeds they call glory & shame,—I disclaim them all. I say to the Universe, Mighty one! thou art not my mother; Return to chaos, if thou wilt, I shall still exist. I live. If I owe my being, it is to a destiny ...
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