author: ralph waldo emerson

The Topical Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson

... Music Hall in Boston , NY 187 . ( 96 ) Clough . self - torturing inversion ... devil take the hindmost " , There seems nothing for it but to leave poetry ... page are about Clough's Poems , 1863. Pages 10-12 in this edition contain " Once ...

Harvard Classics Anthology - Complete 51 Volumes: The Greatest Works of World Literature - Dr. Eliot's Five Foot Shelf

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

The Complete Harvard Classics - All 51 Volumes in One Edition: The Anthology of the Greatest Works of World Literature - Dr. Eliot's Five Foot Shelf

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

Harvard Classics: All 71 Volumes

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

The Harvard Classics Shelf: All 51 Volumes of Essential Classics + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

The Complete Harvard Classics Shelf: 51 Volumes of Essential Classics + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

Harvard's Classics Collection: Complete 71 Volumes: The Five Foot Shelf & The Shelf of Fiction - The Classic Literature & The Greatest Works of Fiction from Antics to Modern Age

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

Abraham Lincoln: The Gettysburg Speech A

Also included are: .an 1891 essay by Carl Schurz (1829-1906), a prominent and trusted member of the Lincoln administration, a loving but un-idealized acclamation of the man and his work that delves into the deep sense of morality and ...

The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Etc

... Bring this philosophic stone , Karun's treasure , Noah's age ; Haste , that by thy means I open All the doors of luck and life . Bring to me ... flute and lyre lordly speak ; Lees of wine outvalue crowns . Bring me , boy , the veiled beauty ...

Nature and Walking

Together in one volume, Emerson's Nature and Thoreau's Walking, is writing that defines our distinctly American relationship to nature.

Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VIII: Letters and Social Aims

... CW , VII , 108 . For the value of a trope . ... are tropes . Cf. JMN , XII ... shows of things to the desires of the mind ” ; JMN , III , 247 ; V , 190 , 221 ; VI , 41 , 173 ... The selection ... fate . JMN , XII , 346 . Or , shall we say ...

The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Cabot, J. E. A memoir of Ralph Waldo Emerson

... eclipse , Edward would have made the name of Em- erson more famous than it is . Yet , when a friend alluded to the sensation that some of his college dissertations produced , Edward said , " Yes , they say much of me , but I tell them ...

The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson with a General Index and a Memoir

... eclipse , Edward would have made the name of Em- erson more famous than it is . Yet , when a friend alluded to the sensation that some of his college dissertations produced , Edward said , “ Yes , they say much of me , but I tell them ...

Works

... eclipse , Edward would have made the name of Em- erson more famous than it is . Yet , when a friend alluded to the sensation that some of his college dissertations produced , Edward said , " Yes , they say much of me , but I tell them ...

Harvard Classics Anthology - Complete 51 Volumes: The Greatest Works of World Literature - Dr. Eliot's Five Foot Shelf

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... Egmont is discovered sleeping on a couch. A rustling of keys is heard; the ... imagination and belief. Silva (takes the sentence from an attendant, unfolds ... Egmont. Can the king transfer that authority? Silva. "We declare, after a ...

Harvard Classics: Complete 51-Volume Anthology: The Greatest Works of World Literature

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineBrinsley SheridanHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... sweet wee Donald, Picture o' the great Clanronald; Brawlie kens our wanton Chief Wha gat my young Highland thief. Leeze me on thy bonie craigie, An' thou live, thou'll steal ... score o'kye, Ochon, Ochon, Ochrie! Feeding on you hill sae high, ...

Harvard Classics (All 51 Volumes)

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineBrinsley SheridanHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... Dana, John Dryden, Philip Massinger, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, John Ruskin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ernest Renan ... Bracy! bard Bracy! your horses are fleet, Ye must ride up the hall, your music so sweet, More loud than your horses ...

The Harvard Classics Anthology: 51 Volumes of Nonfiction Books + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormCharles DickensPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... Dana, Henry Fielding, John Dryden, Philip Massinger, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Bret Harte, George Sand, John ... Bracy! bard Bracy! your horses are fleet, Ye must ride up the hall, your music so sweet, More loud than your horses ...

The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson

... first age , the sons of God printed no epics , carved no stone , painted no canvas , built no railroad , for the sculpture , the poetry , the music and architecture were in the man . Bolts and bars do not seem to him the most exalted or ...

The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Comprising His Essays, Lectures, Poems, and Orations...

... age under an aspect more conformed to the common - sense , if the question be the felicity of age , I fear the first ... exalted dreams , which we call hope , love , ambition , science : especially ... Age , like woman , requires fit ...

The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Etc

... age under an aspect more conformed to the common - sense , if the question be the felicity of age , I fear the first ... exalted dreams , which we call hope , love , ambition , science : especially ... Age , like woman , requires fit ...

Society and Solitude

... first popular judgments will be unfavorable . From the point of sensuous ... exalted dreams , which we call hope , love , am- bition , science : especially , it creates a craving for larger ... Age is becoming in the country 161 Old Age.

The Prose Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson

... age under an aspect more conformed to the common sense , if the question be the felicity of age , I fear the first ... exalted dreams , which we call hope , love , ambi- tion , science especially ... Age , like woman , requires fit surroundings ...

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