The People of Concord: One Year in the Flowering of New EnglandGlobe Pequot Press, 1990 - 228 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 18
Página 36
... clear : The household could not be a very happy one . The father , though obsessively concerned with shaping the character of his children , contrib- uted nothing to their support . The mother , Abby , too proud and loyal to complain ...
... clear : The household could not be a very happy one . The father , though obsessively concerned with shaping the character of his children , contrib- uted nothing to their support . The mother , Abby , too proud and loyal to complain ...
Página 43
... clear water . Meanwhile Henry himself made frequent visits to friends and family in the village . On February 4 he had delivered a lecture to the members of the Concord Lyceum on Thomas Carlyle , the great Scottish writer who had such a ...
... clear water . Meanwhile Henry himself made frequent visits to friends and family in the village . On February 4 he had delivered a lecture to the members of the Concord Lyceum on Thomas Carlyle , the great Scottish writer who had such a ...
Página 63
... clear and forcible in style , unscrupulous and bitter , sometimes to malignity , in its partisan spirit . " Beginning with the issue of January 2 , 1846 , the Freeman almost every week printed , in addition to local items , some ...
... clear and forcible in style , unscrupulous and bitter , sometimes to malignity , in its partisan spirit . " Beginning with the issue of January 2 , 1846 , the Freeman almost every week printed , in addition to local items , some ...
Contenido
The Time the People and the Place | 1 |
Waldo and Lidian | 15 |
Concords Utopian Neighbor | 85 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 4 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The People of Concord: One Year in the Flowering of New England Paul Brooks Vista de fragmentos - 1990 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alcott already American appeared Asa Gray asked beautiful become Boston boys Bronson Brook Farm brother called CHAPTER Charles church close Concord considered earlier early Edward Elizabeth England established farmer father feeling felt fields Freeman George going Harvard Hawthorne Henry Henry Thoreau History Hoar Hosmer included John journal knew known later learned lecture letter Library living looked Lyceum Margaret meeting Merrimack Rivers mind mother named Nathaniel nature neighbors never noted Old Manse once perhaps person Phi Beta Kappa poems political published R. W. Emerson readers recalled Ripley River Samuel Sarah seems Social society soon Sophia Thoreau thought took town village Walden Pond Waldo Emerson walk wife woman women woods writing wrote York young