Sold Out
Book Categories |
Letters to a future transcendentalist | 3 | |
Reason versus understanding | 9 | |
Humanity's likeness to God | 11 | |
The age of machinery | 16 | |
A young minister refuses to perform a crucial duty | 20 | |
The significance of Kantian philosophy | 23 | |
Victor Cousin and the future of American philosophy | 25 | |
Nature | 31 | |
from The doctrine and discipline of human culture | 68 | |
The reconciliation of God, humanity, state, and church | 76 | |
"The American scholar" | 82 | |
from "Transcendentalism" | 100 | |
Letter of intent to resign | 103 | |
"The transcendentalist" | 107 | |
On Boston transcendentalism | 123 | |
A transcendentalist's profession of faith | 125 | |
Divinity school address | 129 | |
from "The new school in literature and religion" | 146 | |
God's personhood vindicated | 150 | |
from A discourse on the latest form of infidelity | 152 | |
from "The latest form of infidelity" examined | 155 | |
Recollection of mystical experiences | 158 | |
from A discourse of the transient and permanent in Christianity | 162 | |
"Transcendental Bible" | 175 | |
Christianity and Hinduism compared | 178 | |
from "The sympathy of religions" | 182 | |
from "The laboring classes" | 193 | |
Ralph Waldo Emerson declines George Ripley's invitation to join Brook Farm | 201 | |
"Self-reliance" | 208 | |
from "Plan of the West Roxbury community" | 232 | |
Brook Farm's (first published) constitution | 235 | |
from "A sermon of merchants" | 244 | |
On the Italian revolution | 251 | |
"Resistance to civil government" | 257 | |
A controversial experiment in progressive education : part one | 281 | |
A controversial experiment in progressive education : part two | 290 | |
A Margaret Fuller conversation on gender | 297 | |
from "The great lawsuit" | 301 | |
Why Concord? : ("Musketaquid") | 323 | |
from "Life in the woods" | 327 | |
from "Walking" | 329 | |
Two proposals for land preservation | 336 | |
from "Saints, and their bodies" | 338 | |
The significance of British West Indian emancipation | 347 | |
On the narrative of Frederick Douglass | 354 | |
from "The function of conscience" and "The fugitive slave law" | 357 | |
from "The fugitive slave law" | 362 | |
from "A plea for Captain John Brown" | 370 | |
"The editors to the reader" | 383 | |
Verses of the portfolio | 388 | |
from "The poet" | 392 | |
from "American literature" | 405 | |
Music philosophically considered | 410 | |
from Preface to Leaves of grass | 416 | |
selected "Orphic sayings" | 421 | |
Report of Margaret Fuller conversation on "life" | 424 | |
from "Sayings of Confucius" | 427 | |
A walk to Walden | 429 | |
First days at Walden | 433 | |
Boat song | 442 | |
Hymn of the Earth | 443 | |
from "Wachusett" | 444 | |
Enosis | 446 | |
Correspondences | 447 | |
The pines and the sea | 448 | |
Each and all | 450 | |
The problem | 451 | |
Uriel | 453 | |
The rhodora : on being asked, whence is the flower? | 455 | |
Hamatreya | 455 | |
The snow-storm | 457 | |
Ode, inscribed to W. H. Channing | 458 | |
Bacchus | 461 | |
Hymn : sung at the completion of the Concord monument, April 19, 1836 | 463 | |
Brahma | 464 | |
Boston hymn read in music hall, January 1, 1863 | 464 | |
Days | 467 | |
Meditations, Sunday, May 12, 1833 | 469 | |
My seal-ring | 471 | |
[Each Orpheus] | 472 | |
To a friend | 472 | |
Questionings | 473 | |
[I stood upon the sullen shore] | 477 | |
Oh melancholy liberty | 477 | |
[One look the mother cast upon her child] | 477 | |
[I see them ...] | 478 | |
[Better a sin which purposed wrong to none] | 478 | |
[To Emerson] | 479 | |
[Lo! cast upon the shoal of time] | 479 | |
[Great God, I ask thee ...] | 482 | |
Haze | 482 | |
[My love must be as free] | 483 | |
The inward morning | 484 | |
Sic Vita | 485 | |
Smoke | 486 | |
The new birth | 488 | |
The presence | 489 | |
Nature | 489 | |
The Barberry bush | 490 | |
The garden | 490 | |
The brother's blood | 491 | |
Yourself | 491 | |
The better self | 492 | |
To you | 494 | |
"Leila" | 499 | |
from "Ktaadn" | 505 | |
A transcendental childhood | 513 | |
Glimpses of transcendental Concord | 523 | |
Recollections of a transcendentalist insider | 526 | |
Emerson observed | 529 | |
A dying transcendentalist looks back | 532 | |
from "Historic notes of life and letters in Massachusetts" | 538 | |
from Transcendentalism in New England | 542 | |
Transcendentalism as feminist | 546 | |
A Concord pilgrimage | 554 |
Login|Complaints|Blog|Games|Digital Media|Souls|Obituary|Contact Us|FAQ
CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!! X
You must be logged in to add to WishlistX
This item is in your Wish ListX
This item is in your CollectionThe American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings
X
This Item is in Your InventoryThe American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings
X
You must be logged in to review the productsX
X
X
Add The American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings, Transcendentalism was the first major intellectual movement in U.S. history, championing the inherent divinity of each individual, as well as the value of collective social action. In the mid-nineteenth century, the movement took off, changing how America, The American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
X
Add The American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings, Transcendentalism was the first major intellectual movement in U.S. history, championing the inherent divinity of each individual, as well as the value of collective social action. In the mid-nineteenth century, the movement took off, changing how America, The American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings to your collection on WonderClub |