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Journals Of Ralph Waldo Emerson, With Annotations - 1824-1832
Journals Of Ralph Waldo Emerson With Annotations 18241832 Author:Ralph Waldo Emerson JOURNALS OF RALPH WALDO EMERSON WITH ANNOTATIONS EDITED BY EDWARD WALDO EMERSON AND WALDO EMERSON FORBES LonBan CONSTABLE CO. LIMITED BOSTON AND NEW YORK HQUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 1910 COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY EDWARD WALDO EMERSON ALL RIGHTS RESERVED CONTENTS TEACHER AND DIYINITT STUDENT JOURNAL XV I 824 Letter to Aunt Mary Byrons death. Books of the ... more »Cen- turies, A Man. Each and All. Tiberius. Questionings Truth elusive, honest doubts good seen everywhere. Books and Men. Writing for Americans, a proposed Spectator. Civilization. Society or Solitude. Frag- ment for Sermon, God within. Imagination. Provi- dence. Faith a telescope. Aunt Marys reproving letter Holy Ghost degenerate Cambridge Channing and Ware diluted Calvinism Christ against Ger- man madness an appeal. A portion of the nephews answer The God of Nature against the God of Cal- vin. Verses, Forefathersy Dq. Books. . . . . Reflections on closing his School cultivate sympathy. Verses on leaving the old life for the new. Prosperity and Arms. Editorial confidences Ancestry brothers Conventional life selfishness. Everetts Plymouth Oration Mediaeval despair and modern hope Fortune or Providence Strength of weakness. Practical poetry. Keeping. Solitude dissuasions from the ministry a free mind. Henry Clay. Leaves Roxbury for Cam- bridge Divinity School reflections. Poetical quotations. The Ministry of the Day the sages of old. Solitude or Society again Action. Poem, Riches The Cater- pillar. Letter to Aunt Mary Anthropomorphism the Divinity of common sense always recognized Natures influence. Modern progress. The Educated Mind. Books. Ill health leaves Cambridge. . . JOURNAL XVII Teaching again in Roxbury and Cambridge. Joy in writing again. Faces the uncertain future. Content, -. L with Nineteenth Centrycompensation people who sell themselves Sin is ignorane. Another letter to Aunt Mary Hiime, his influence each must have his own religion Value of Christianity ,-even-ithough transient. i Greatness. The Sabbath. Slave trade. Verses, Fate. Rulers. Fitness. The Wind a poet. Another letter to Aunt Mary German criticism of Christian evidences loss of the tradition would be tragic not to be passively abandoned. Reason in religion. Reflections and hopes. Byron. Age of Chivalry Charless remark. The world our teacher History, its help for ideals. Another letter education after death. Public prayer. Growth of ones knowledge. Forethought and afterthought. Friendship. Style. Hints of history. Seed- - . thought. Verses, Living-prayer. Immortality. Letter to Aunt Mary Value of eyes Everetts Phi Beta Kappa oration genius, the Spirit ofthe Age Shakspeare The -.-- - Mundane Soul Man clings to identity the Hereafter CONTENTS unworthily pictured hard to conceive without Matter surely welcome. Another letter Poetry Poet needs material form, Life as well as Imagination Shakspeare and Wordsworth contrasted criticism of latter what is poetry Happiness defined. Letter to Aunt Mary the moment5 of ourlives. Funeral rites of Adams and Jefferson. Letter to Edward the Souls affinities. Quiddle. Reflections, bowing to necessity. Sampson Reeds book. Increasing ill health and depression hope of Edwards return from Europe take courage, and die like a gentleman. Christianity and morals Reason of Evil. ReIigious dogmas pass what then Poisons. Letter to Aunt Mary Hume again, and Gibbon. Shakspeare Burke Everett Emersons own cold temperament. Another letter Sampson Reeds Growth of the Mind Swedenborgians day of sentiment. Approbated to preach. Combats of Conscience. Belief r in the Resurrection. Study of History. Butler on uanslations. Verses Lfe or Death Song. Emerson sails southward for his health. Versatility. The voyage. Charleston tides of thought. Moral sense native discoveries and science in morals. Advancing religion. Hypocrisy sin carries its reward. Theologic war. Manners Southern courtesy. Reading . . . . 70 THE TO UNG M...« less