Page 414, note 1. The doctrine of the " Compensation,"
in the first series of Essays.
Page 416, note 1. As modesty is the cardinal virtue of woman, so Mr. Emerson held that
THE following list gives the titles of the volumes to which
the Roman numerals in this Index refer:
I. NATURE, ADDRESSES and Lectures.
II. ESSAYS, FIRST SERIES.
III. ESSAYS, SECOND SERIES.
VII. SOCIETY AND SOLITUDE.
VIII. LETTERS AND SOCIAL AIMS.
X. LECTURES AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
XII. NATURAL HISTORY Of Intellect.
[Titles of Essays and Poems are printed in SMALL CAPItals.]
Abandonment, no greatness with- out, vII. 49, 181; the way of life, 11. 321.
Abdel Kader, and Daumas, vii. 271;
on nobility, vi. 176.
Able men, have respect for justice, 1. 165; ask only for ability, iv. 268. Abolition, bigot in, 11. 51; the church appears in, 11. 251; church hos- tile to, x. 114; shadow of Clark- son, 11. 61; conventions, 11. 135; effect of, XI. 100; transcendental- ists and, 1. 348, 349. Abolitionist, every man an, XI. 250, 354; farmer the true, VII. 141; love the arch-, XI. 281; made by slavery, XI. 281.
Aboriginal man, not engaging, vHI. $270.
Aboriginal power, 11. 358; VI. 72. Aboriginal races, incapable of im- provement, XII. 26.
Aboriginal, the State not, 111. 199. Absolute and relative, Iv. 149. Absolve you to yourself, 11. 50. Abstemious, of criticism, vII. 180;
spirit's teachings are, iv. 139. Abstemiousness, quiddling, vi. 154. Abstinence, 1. 215, 251.- Abstract truth, 11. 326, 331. Abstraction, of scholars, vi. 156; viii. 288. Abstractionists, Nature furnishes,
III. 237; IV. 154, 155. Absurdity, difference from me, the measure of, IV. 24. Abu Ali Seena, iv. 95;'
Abu Taleb, vi. 273; IX. 302. Abul Khain, IV. 95. Abury, temple at, v. 278, 281. Abuses, block ways to employments,
Abyss, replies to abyss, vII. 171; of
being, 11. 121; iv. 86. Accidents, not to be feared, vi. 232; insurance office increases, 11. 85; there are no, vII. 132; lovely, of Nature, IH. 231; resisting, vi. 24. Accomplishments, VI. 143; of the scholar, x. 278.
Accuracy, essential to beauty, x. 147. Achievement, power of, x. 277; not computed by time, 11. 317. Achilles, in every nation, vII. 255; vulnerable, 11.107.
Achromatic lens, needful to see real- ity, x. 166.
Acorn, thousand forests in one, 11. 4. Acquaintances, high, the great hap- piness of life, vII. 306. Acquainted, be not too much, III. 137.
Acre, cleave to thine, vi. 244; my, IX. 143. Acres, black, of the night, Ix. 342;
mystic fruit, IX. 145; sitfast, 1x. 36. Acrostic, a character like, 11. 58, 148.
Action, Actions, honest and natural agree, 11. 58; preëxist in the actor, III. 97; not over-doing and busy- ness, x. 267; not cowed by the name of, 11. 163; dispose to greater conclusions, II. 194; tends to di- versity, iv. 51; of infinite elastic- ity, 11. 164; not rashly explained, III. 108; in life, few, x11. 412; fu- ture not to be decided beforehand, XI. 169; what are called good, 11. 53; great do not let us go behind them, 11. 250; heroic, are beauti- ful, 1. 19; not indifferent, 11. 120, 317; independent, rare, x. 229; their influence not measured by
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