Margaret Fuller: Essays on American Life and LettersRowman & Littlefield, 1978 - 400 páginas To find more information about Rowman and Littlefield titles, please visit www.rowmanlittlefield.com. |
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Página 7
... become involved with the Transcendental Club and the Dial . Already well on her way to that " predetermination to eat this big universe as her oys- ter or her egg , " which Thomas Carlyle later noticed in her , ' * Portions of this ...
... become involved with the Transcendental Club and the Dial . Already well on her way to that " predetermination to eat this big universe as her oys- ter or her egg , " which Thomas Carlyle later noticed in her , ' * Portions of this ...
Página 11
... become so popular - even though it was one of the most expensive series in Boston - that men were admitted . She also con- tinued her study of German literature , and in 1842 she trans- lated part of Bettina's correspondence with ...
... become so popular - even though it was one of the most expensive series in Boston - that men were admitted . She also con- tinued her study of German literature , and in 1842 she trans- lated part of Bettina's correspondence with ...
Página 14
... become the literary critic for his newspaper and offered to publish her next book , which would be an expansion and revision of her " The Great Lawsuit . Man versus Men . Woman versus Women , " from the July 1843 Dial . Fuller accepted ...
... become the literary critic for his newspaper and offered to publish her next book , which would be an expansion and revision of her " The Great Lawsuit . Man versus Men . Woman versus Women , " from the July 1843 Dial . Fuller accepted ...
Página 20
... become sullied through contact with the harsh real world . On this last point Brownson had also commented : ... Miss Fuller thinks ... men have the advantage ; with them it is not so bad . . . . Men are not much more easily satisfied ...
... become sullied through contact with the harsh real world . On this last point Brownson had also commented : ... Miss Fuller thinks ... men have the advantage ; with them it is not so bad . . . . Men are not much more easily satisfied ...
Página 21
... becoming blacksmiths , sail- ors , and soldiers , are the restraints which Nature has imposed , and which can never be overcome . The Southern Quarterly Review had pursued this point at length , describing how woman's power is actually ...
... becoming blacksmiths , sail- ors , and soldiers , are the restraints which Nature has imposed , and which can never be overcome . The Southern Quarterly Review had pursued this point at length , describing how woman's power is actually ...
Contenido
A Short Essay On Critics | 51 |
Hawthornes Grandfathers Chair | 58 |
Lowells A Years Life | 59 |
Hawthornes TwiceTold Tales | 60 |
From Summer on the Lakes in 1843 | 62 |
Woman in the Nineteenth Century | 82 |
Emersons Essays | 240 |
Thanksgiving | 248 |
Fourth of July | 297 |
Poes Tales | 301 |
The Wrongs of American Women and The Duty of American Women | 303 |
Poes The Raven and Other Poems | 311 |
Longfellows Poems | 317 |
Cassius M Clay | 325 |
The Rich Man An Ideal Sketch | 329 |
Darkness Visible | 338 |
Christmas | 254 |
New Years Day | 261 |
Childrens Books | 267 |
Etherology | 271 |
St Valentines DayBloomingdale Asylum for the Insane | 277 |
Cheap Postage Bill | 282 |
The Excellence of Goodness | 284 |
American Facts | 289 |
Prevalent Idea that Politeness is too great a Luxury to be given to the Poor | 291 |
Frederick Douglass | 294 |
Consecration of Grace Church | 349 |
The Poor Man An Ideal Sketch | 352 |
What fits a Man to be a Voter? Is it to be White Within or White Without | 362 |
Melvilles Types | 366 |
Mistress of herself though china fall | 367 |
Hawthornes Mosses from an Old Manse | 371 |
Browns Novels | 375 |
Farewell | 379 |
American Literature Its Position in the Present Time and Prospects for the Future | 381 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Agamemnon American beauty believe better Boston called character child critic daughter Dial Emerson English Essays Euripides expressed eyes faith father feel flowers Fuller's note genius George Sand girl give Goethe grace Greek happy heart heaven Hecuba honor hope human husband influence intellectual Iolaus Iphigenia James Freeman Clarke James Russell Lowell ladies less liberal Christians literature live look Macaria Margaret Fuller marriage means ment mind moral mother Nathaniel Hawthorne nation nature never New-York Daily Tribune noble poems poet present published pure Ralph Waldo Emerson reverence Review seems society soul speak spirit sweet thee things thou thought tion Transcendental Club Transcendentalists true truth Twice-Told Tales University virgin virtue wife William Ellery Channing wise wish woman women words worthy writer Xenophon York young