The Portable EmersonPenguin, 30/12/2014 - 752 páginas This volume, edited by Carl Bode in collaboration with Malcolm Cowley, presents the essential Emerson, selected from works that eloquently express the philosophy of a worldly idealist. The Portable Emerson comprises essays, including “History,” “Self-Reliance,” “The Over-Soul,” “Circles,” and “The Poet”; Emerson’s first book, Nature, in its entirety; twenty-two poems, including “Uriel,” “The Humble-Bee,” and “Give All to Love”; orations, including “The American Scholar,” “The Fugitive Slave Law,” and “John Brown”; English Traits, complete; and biographical essays on Plato, Napoleon, Henry David Thoreau, Thomas Carlyle, and others. |
Índice
A | |
REPRESENTATIVE MEN | |
1841 Usesof | |
JohnBrown 1860 | |
SELECTIONS ToWilliam Emerson January 6 and 9 1827 | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
action Æschylus allthe aman anda andall andnot andof andso andthe andwill appear areso asby asthe atrue atthe beauty believe butthe bythe character church Concord conversation divine doesnot donot Emerson eternal experience expression eyes fact feel forms friends fromthe genius heart heaven hehad hehas heis hisown human Ihave inall inevery inhis intellect inthe intheir intothe isan isin isnot isthe itis itwas knowthe labor live man’s manof Margaret Fuller Massachusetts mind moral nature never ofall ofhis ofit ofman ofnature ofour ofthe ofthis onthe outof persons philosopher Plato poet Ralph Waldo Emerson religion seems sentiment Shewas society soul speak spirit thatis thatthe thatwe themind thereis thesame thesoul theworld theyare things thou thought tobe today tohim tohis tothe truth Truthis universe virtue wehave whatis whichis whichthe whilst whole witha withthe words Zoroaster