On EmersonEdwin Harrison Cady, Louis J. Budd Duke University Press, 1988 - 282 psl. From 1929 to the latest issue, American Literature has been the foremost journal expressing the findings of those who study our national literature. The journal has published the best work of literary historians, critics, and bibliographers, ranging from the founders of the discipline to the best current critics and researchers. The longevity of this excellence lends a special distinction to the articles in American Literature. Presented in order of their first appearance, the articles in each volume constitute a revealing record of developing insights and important shifts of critical emphasis. Each article has opened a fresh line of inquiry, established a fresh perspective on a familiar topic, or settled a question that engaged the interest of experts. |
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22 psl.
... Puritan estab- lishment and a continuation of the nonconforming principle from which Puritanism took its rise . It was so also with Emerson . It is not enough merely to see that he turned his back upon his Puritan inheritance ; it must ...
... Puritan estab- lishment and a continuation of the nonconforming principle from which Puritanism took its rise . It was so also with Emerson . It is not enough merely to see that he turned his back upon his Puritan inheritance ; it must ...
227 psl.
... Puritan imagination improves on reality , keeping the promises alive in the heart of the regenerate Christian . " For Emerson too the inbred conviction that the New Jerusalem is always still to be achieved feeds the myth that our ...
... Puritan imagination improves on reality , keeping the promises alive in the heart of the regenerate Christian . " For Emerson too the inbred conviction that the New Jerusalem is always still to be achieved feeds the myth that our ...
241 psl.
... Puritan mission when he could appropriate the spirit of Jesus to his own life and time . The challenge is to " be ourselves the children of the light " ( W , I , 221 ) . Indeed , Emerson's appropriation of the Puritan past is not mere ...
... Puritan mission when he could appropriate the spirit of Jesus to his own life and time . The challenge is to " be ourselves the children of the light " ( W , I , 221 ) . Indeed , Emerson's appropriation of the Puritan past is not mere ...
Turinys
Emerson and Quakerism 1938 | 19 |
William James and Emerson 1939 | 43 |
Plastic Nature and Transcendental Art 1951 | 62 |
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action Address American appears artist beauty become beginning believe Boston Cabot called Christian church Circles Complete concerning consider continued criticism Cudworth divine doctrine early Emer England essay evidence evil experience expression fact father feeling final Francis Friends hand Henry human ideal ideas Immortality individual intellectual interest Ives James James's Journals Kneeland later lecture Letters live man's March marked material matter means Melville Miller mind moral nature never object original passage person philosophical poet present principle published Puritan Quaker question quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson reason reference relation religion religious seems sense sentence Sermon social society soul Sphinx spirit statement suggests symbols things thought tion Transcendentalism true truth understanding universe volume whole writing written wrote York