The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Band 12Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1904 |
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Seite 15
... virtue into every creek and inlet which it bathes . To this sea every human house has a water front . But this force , creating nature , visiting whom it will and withdrawing from whom it will , making day where it comes and leaving ...
... virtue into every creek and inlet which it bathes . To this sea every human house has a water front . But this force , creating nature , visiting whom it will and withdrawing from whom it will , making day where it comes and leaving ...
Seite 30
... virtues . Let me whisper a secret ; nobody ever forgives any admiration in you of them , any overestimate of what they do or have . I acquiesce to be that I am , but I wish no one to be civil to me . Strong men understand this very well ...
... virtues . Let me whisper a secret ; nobody ever forgives any admiration in you of them , any overestimate of what they do or have . I acquiesce to be that I am , but I wish no one to be civil to me . Strong men understand this very well ...
Seite 37
... virtue , and we take the wrong path and miss him . ' T is the barbarian instinct within us which culture deadens . We find ourselves expressed in Nature , but we cannot translate it into words . But Percep- tion is the armed eye . A ...
... virtue , and we take the wrong path and miss him . ' T is the barbarian instinct within us which culture deadens . We find ourselves expressed in Nature , but we cannot translate it into words . But Percep- tion is the armed eye . A ...
Seite 45
... virtues , the interval becomes a gulf and we cannot enter into the highest good . Artist natures do not weep . Goethe , the sur- passing intellect of modern times , apprehends the spiritual but is not spiritual . ' There is indeed this ...
... virtues , the interval becomes a gulf and we cannot enter into the highest good . Artist natures do not weep . Goethe , the sur- passing intellect of modern times , apprehends the spiritual but is not spiritual . ' There is indeed this ...
Seite 63
... virtues as well as his fac- ulties well in hand . He was sincerely humble , but he utilized his humanity chiefly as a ... virtue of the Intellect is its own , its courage is of its own kind , and at last it will be justified , though for ...
... virtues as well as his fac- ulties well in hand . He was sincerely humble , but he utilized his humanity chiefly as a ... virtue of the Intellect is its own , its courage is of its own kind , and at last it will be justified , though for ...
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