The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo EmersonРипол Классик - 1041 pages |
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Page vi
... heart was set entirely at rest. This occurred in July, 1874, a year after his return from Europe, whither his friends had sent him to recruit his strength. But it soon became evident that Mr. Emerson's working days were over; it was ...
... heart was set entirely at rest. This occurred in July, 1874, a year after his return from Europe, whither his friends had sent him to recruit his strength. But it soon became evident that Mr. Emerson's working days were over; it was ...
Page ix
... heart, partly from a feeling of repugnance at being forced into an enterprise which he had not intended, but still more perhaps from a sense of inability, more real than he knew, which was beginning to make itself felt. He.
... heart, partly from a feeling of repugnance at being forced into an enterprise which he had not intended, but still more perhaps from a sense of inability, more real than he knew, which was beginning to make itself felt. He.
Page 1
... heart from lovely maids, And malte the darlings of the earth Swainish, coarse and nothing worth: Teach him gladly to postpone Pleasures to another stage Beyond the scope of human age, Freely as taslt at eve undone Waits unblarnccl to ...
... heart from lovely maids, And malte the darlings of the earth Swainish, coarse and nothing worth: Teach him gladly to postpone Pleasures to another stage Beyond the scope of human age, Freely as taslt at eve undone Waits unblarnccl to ...
Page 9
... heart They speken and sound in his car As tho' they loud winds were ;” 1 for the universe is full of their echoes. Every correspondence we observe in mind and matter suggests a substance older and deeper than either of these old ...
... heart They speken and sound in his car As tho' they loud winds were ;” 1 for the universe is full of their echoes. Every correspondence we observe in mind and matter suggests a substance older and deeper than either of these old ...
Page 25
... . They like to go to the theatre and be made to weep; to Faneuil Hall, and be taught by Otis, Webster, or Kossuth, or Phillips, what great hearts they have, what tears, what new possible enlargements to IMAGINATION 25.
... . They like to go to the theatre and be made to weep; to Faneuil Hall, and be taught by Otis, Webster, or Kossuth, or Phillips, what great hearts they have, what tears, what new possible enlargements to IMAGINATION 25.
Contents
3 | |
77 | |
ELOQUENCE | 118 |
RESOURCES | 137 |
THE COMIC | 172 |
PROGRESS OF CULTURE | 205 |
PERSIAN POETRY | 235 |
IMMORTALITY | 321 |
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appears beauty becomes beginning believe better body called carry character comes conversation course delight earth Emerson England essay existence experience expression face fact feel find first force genius give given Hafiz hand hear heard heart hold hope hour human imagination immortality inspiration intellect interest Italy journal king knowledge laws learned lecture less light lines live look manners matter means mind moral Nature never once original Page pass passage Persian persons poem poet poetry present rhyme seems seen sense sentence sentiment society sometimes song soul speak speech spirit suggested tell things thou thought tion true truth universal verse virtue voice whole wise wish write written young