The Topical Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume 2University of Missouri Press, 1990 - Authors, American "Published here for the first time are seven of Emerson's topical notebooks, which served as a source for his lectures, essays, and books of the 1850s, 1860s, and 1870s. Concerned primarily with nature, art, philosophy, American culture, and his comtemporaries, the notebooks presented in this first of a three-volume editions afford fascinating insight into Emerson's creative practices. They will offer new perspectives for future readings of his completed works. The editors provide faithful transcriptions of the notebooks using the highest standards of textual practice. Their detailed annotations describe and comment on erased or revised passages, translate Greek and Latin quotations, and identify books and articles referred to in the texts of the notebooks. References to similar passages in Emerson's journals, lectures, and published works are also provided in the annotations. Publication of these notebooks will inable scholars to trace ideas that have gone unnoticed previously. The Topical Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume 1, offers valuable insight into the art and philosophy of one of America's foremost thinkers. These volumes will be an important addition to any personal or institutional library of nine-teenth-century American literature."--Publishers website. |
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Page 264
... mind . ” The Hindoo ( with his daring Perception ) saw this all - fusing unity , until the solid earth seemed tremulous as his own flesh : " He that plucks a leaf , or treads on a worm , is guilty of Brahminicide . " " Any thing , child ...
... mind . ” The Hindoo ( with his daring Perception ) saw this all - fusing unity , until the solid earth seemed tremulous as his own flesh : " He that plucks a leaf , or treads on a worm , is guilty of Brahminicide . " " Any thing , child ...
Page 265
... Mind . 28 same . " ] " Rightly . . . living in its " is struck through in pencil . A line is drawn in pencil in the left margin beside the entries “ All the parts . . . faculties . ” and “ These things . . . buried . ” See “ Poetry and ...
... Mind . 28 same . " ] " Rightly . . . living in its " is struck through in pencil . A line is drawn in pencil in the left margin beside the entries “ All the parts . . . faculties . ” and “ These things . . . buried . ” See “ Poetry and ...
Page 370
... mind , -do not force them into arrangement too hastily , & presently you shall find they will take < place > their own order , and the order they assume is divine . { 173 } - { 187 } [ blank ] { 188 } ↑ Supra . ↓ The mind in its ...
... mind , -do not force them into arrangement too hastily , & presently you shall find they will take < place > their own order , and the order they assume is divine . { 173 } - { 187 } [ blank ] { 188 } ↑ Supra . ↓ The mind in its ...
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Common terms and phrases
appears in Parnassus Art and Criticism beauty Ben Jonson beside this entry blank Books borrowed Boston Athenaeum canceled in pencil Diwan drawn in pencil Emerson's library English entire entry entry is struck Essays front cover verso genius Geschichte Goethe Gulistan Hafiz heart heaven Henry ink over pencil inserted in pencil Inspiration Intellect Jonson journals lectures left margin beside lines are drawn Literature London Lord Macbeth Max Müller Milton mind Montaigne Nature never numbered Orientalist Persian Poetry Philosophy Plato Plotinus Plutarch PN page PN pages poem poet poetic Poetry and Imagination Proclus prose quotation quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson rhetoric rhyme Saadi Samuel Samuel Johnson Sanskrit Shakespeare song soul speech Swedenborg Taylor Tennyson thee things Thomas thou thought topical notebooks TopN Trans translation truth verse vols volume Von Hammer wine words Wordsworth writing