The American Mind: TRANSITION TO THE MACHINE AGE, 1865-1919. From Leaves of grass. One's self I sing. As I ponder'd in silence. To the states. Poets to come. For you O democracy. To a pupil. Song of myself. Out of the cradle endlessly rocking. A noiseless patient spider. Pioneers! O pioneers. Cavalry crossing a ford. Come up from the fields father. As toilsome I wander'd Virginia's woods. O captain! My captain! When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd. On the beach at night. Song of the redwood tree. Spirit that form'd this scene. Nationality and literature. American characterHarry Redcay Warfel, Ralph Henry Gabriel, Stanley Thomas Williams American Book Company, 1937 |
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Seite 1071
... nature , but as he interprets and controls that which is highest in nature , i.e. , man himself . This suggests the thought that the science of nature is not only related to the science of man be- cause man interprets nature , but ...
... nature , but as he interprets and controls that which is highest in nature , i.e. , man himself . This suggests the thought that the science of nature is not only related to the science of man be- cause man interprets nature , but ...
Seite 1072
... nature which does not regard the spirit of man as a part of nature . But is this all ? Do man and nature exhaust the possibilities of being ? We cannot answer this ques- tion here . But we find suggestions from the spec- trum and the ...
... nature which does not regard the spirit of man as a part of nature . But is this all ? Do man and nature exhaust the possibilities of being ? We cannot answer this ques- tion here . But we find suggestions from the spec- trum and the ...
Seite 1213
... nature . We receive the illu- sion of having power over nature and lose the sense of nature as something mysterious and con- tingent . The God of nature under these conditions is merely an amiable expression , a superfluity , and the ...
... nature . We receive the illu- sion of having power over nature and lose the sense of nature as something mysterious and con- tingent . The God of nature under these conditions is merely an amiable expression , a superfluity , and the ...
Inhalt
Walt Whitman 18191892 | 833 |
From Leaves of Grass Opinion in | 875 |
O Bury Me Not On the Lone Prairie 881 Business Men and Spec | 886 |
Urheberrecht | |
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