The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo EmersonРипол Классик - 1041 pages |
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Page vii
... seen as much as he desired. Mr. Emerson's family also, with his sanction, asked Mr. Cabot to write his Memoir when the time should come, and this he did with the temperance and discrimination that Mr. Emerson would have wished. Here ...
... seen as much as he desired. Mr. Emerson's family also, with his sanction, asked Mr. Cabot to write his Memoir when the time should come, and this he did with the temperance and discrimination that Mr. Emerson would have wished. Here ...
Page 15
... . Every new object so seen gives a shock of agreeable surprise. The impressions on the imagination make the great days of life: the book, the landscape or the personality which did not stay on the surface of the eye. POETRY. 1. 5.
... . Every new object so seen gives a shock of agreeable surprise. The impressions on the imagination make the great days of life: the book, the landscape or the personality which did not stay on the surface of the eye. POETRY. 1. 5.
Page 19
... seen; that which makes them is not seen: these, then, are “ apparent copies of unapparent natures." Bacon expressed the same sense in his IMAGINATION 19.
... seen; that which makes them is not seen: these, then, are “ apparent copies of unapparent natures." Bacon expressed the same sense in his IMAGINATION 19.
Page 20
... seen through them.\The selection of tmgdspo more arbitrary than the power ' ' of the ima e. The selection must folloi fate. Werfected, is the only verity; is t e speech of man after the real, and not after the apparent. Or shall we say ...
... seen through them.\The selection of tmgdspo more arbitrary than the power ' ' of the ima e. The selection must folloi fate. Werfected, is the only verity; is t e speech of man after the real, and not after the apparent. Or shall we say ...
Page 27
... than anything seen by his mortal eye. . . . I assert for myself that I do not behold the outward creation, and that to me it would be a hindrance, and not action. I question not my corporeal eye any more IMAGINATION 2;
... than anything seen by his mortal eye. . . . I assert for myself that I do not behold the outward creation, and that to me it would be a hindrance, and not action. I question not my corporeal eye any more IMAGINATION 2;
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