Representative Men: Seven LecturesRandom House Publishing Group, 18. 12. 2007 - Počet stran: 192 Introduction by Brenda Wineapple In 1845 Ralph Waldo Emerson began a series of lectures and writings in which he limned six figures who embodied the principles and aspirations of a still-young American republic. Emerson offers timeless meditations on the value of individual greatness, reconnecting readers with the everyday virtues of his “Representative Men”: Plato, in whose writings are contained “the culture of nations”; Emanuel Swedenborg, a “rich discoverer” who strove to unite the scientific and spiritual planes; Michel de Montaigne, “the frankest and honestest of all writers”; William Shakespeare, who “wrote the text of modern life”; Napoleon Bonaparte, who had the “virtues and vices” of common men writ large; and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who “in conversation, in calamity…finds new materials.” This Modern Library Paperback Classic reflects the author’s corrections for an 1876 reprinting. |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 21
Strana x
... hand with Deity " -he wasn't asked to return for more than two decades . But this exhilarated prophet of self - reliance also worried a good deal about the individual's relation to everything ( and everyone ) else . Do our intuitions ...
... hand with Deity " -he wasn't asked to return for more than two decades . But this exhilarated prophet of self - reliance also worried a good deal about the individual's relation to everything ( and everyone ) else . Do our intuitions ...
Strana xi
... " we do not owe this to Plato but to the idea to which , also , Plato was debtor . " On the other hand , without the man , there is no idea . And so we come around , full circle , to the individual , mortal Introduction xi.
... " we do not owe this to Plato but to the idea to which , also , Plato was debtor . " On the other hand , without the man , there is no idea . And so we come around , full circle , to the individual , mortal Introduction xi.
Strana xiv
... hands of one set of criminals into the hands of another set of criminals , as fast as the government is changed , and the march of civi- lization is a train of felonies , yet , general ends are somehow answered , " he rouses us at the ...
... hands of one set of criminals into the hands of another set of criminals , as fast as the government is changed , and the march of civi- lization is a train of felonies , yet , general ends are somehow answered , " he rouses us at the ...
Strana xv
... hand , Emerson defies the parochialisms and de- mands of our present . He scanned the world , his world , for his fallible heroes and wrote of them not in terms of fashion but according to his lights . " Talent alone can not make a ...
... hand , Emerson defies the parochialisms and de- mands of our present . He scanned the world , his world , for his fallible heroes and wrote of them not in terms of fashion but according to his lights . " Talent alone can not make a ...
Strana 5
... hands . I count him a great man who inhabits a higher sphere of thought , into which other men rise with labor and difficulty ; he has but to open his eyes to see things in a true light , and in large relations ; whilst they must make ...
... hands . I count him a great man who inhabits a higher sphere of thought , into which other men rise with labor and difficulty ; he has but to open his eyes to see things in a true light , and in large relations ; whilst they must make ...
Obsah
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PLATO OR THE PHILOSOPHER | 23 |
SWEDENBORG OR THE MYSTIC | 53 |
MONTAIGNE OR THE SCEPTIC | 85 |
SHAKSPEARE OR THE POET | 107 |
NAPOLEON OR THE MAN OF THE WORLD | 126 |
GOETHE OR THE WRITER | 147 |
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action affirms animal appears battle of Austerlitz beauty believe biography body Bonaparte brain celestial century church comes conversation courage culture delight dence divine doctrine earth Emerson English essays Europe everything exist experience expression eyes fact faculties faith genius Goethe Harvard Divinity School heaven hero human ideas intellectual king knew labor learned less live Lord Elgin mankind manners Margaret Fuller MARY OLIVER means merit mind Modern Library Montaigne moral Napoleon nature never numbers opinion organ original perception persons Philolaus philosopher plant Plato Plotinus Plutarch poet poetic poetry RALPH WALDO EMERSON religion representative scepticism scholar secret seems sense sentence sentiment Seven Wise Masters Shakspeare society Socrates soul spirit Swedenborg talent things thought tion truth ture unity universal virtue Vishnu whilst whole wise write