The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo EmersonРипол Классик - 1041 pages |
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Page x
... mind by some diversion. The Nile tour was suggested and made feasible by kind friends, and he wrote to England explaining the necessity for some delay. Soon after his return home he heard of the death of the English publisher, and ...
... mind by some diversion. The Nile tour was suggested and made feasible by kind friends, and he wrote to England explaining the necessity for some delay. Soon after his return home he heard of the death of the English publisher, and ...
Page 6
... mind; its strange suggestions and laws; a certain tyranny which springs up in his own thoughts, which have an order, method and beliefs of their own, very difi'erent from the order which this common sense uses.' Suppose there were in ...
... mind; its strange suggestions and laws; a certain tyranny which springs up in his own thoughts, which have an order, method and beliefs of their own, very difi'erent from the order which this common sense uses.' Suppose there were in ...
Page 9
... mind. The world is an immense picture-book of every passage in human life. Every object he beholds is the mask ofa man. " The privates of man's heart They speken and sound in his car As tho' they loud winds were ;” 1 for the universe is ...
... mind. The world is an immense picture-book of every passage in human life. Every object he beholds is the mask ofa man. " The privates of man's heart They speken and sound in his car As tho' they loud winds were ;” 1 for the universe is ...
Page 10
... mind. The Indian, the hunter, the boy with his pets, have sweeter knowledge of these than the savant. We use semblances of logic until experience puts us in possession of real logic. The poet knows the missing link by the joy it gives ...
... mind. The Indian, the hunter, the boy with his pets, have sweeter knowledge of these than the savant. We use semblances of logic until experience puts us in possession of real logic. The poet knows the missing link by the joy it gives ...
Page 11
... mind, penetrated with its sentiment or its thought, projects it outward on whatever it beholds. The lover sees reminders of his mistress in every beautiful object; the saint, an argument for devotion in every natural process; and the ...
... mind, penetrated with its sentiment or its thought, projects it outward on whatever it beholds. The lover sees reminders of his mistress in every beautiful object; the saint, an argument for devotion in every natural process; and the ...
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