Nature, Addresses, and lectures
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Bibliographic Information
Nature, Addresses, and lectures
(The collected works of Ralph Waldo Emerson / Alfred R. Ferguson, general editor, v. 1)
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1971
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In 1849 Ralph Waldo Emerson collected in one volume all of his published work he thought worthy of preservation that had not been contained in the two series of Essays (1841, 1844) and the Poems (1847). Included were the essay Nature (1836); four orations, "The American Scholar," "The Divinity School Address," and two others; and five lectures which had appeared in The Dial.
As the first volume of a projected new Collected Works, this edition of Nature, Addresses, and Lectures now provides for the first time a definitive text based on collation of all editions in which Emerson might have had a hand, together with a wholly new introduction and extensive notes. The recently published Journals and Lectures from this period help bring to this volume a fresh perspective on the first and formative stage of Emerson's career as a public figure and man of letters.
Introduction and Notes by Robert E. Spiller; Text Established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Table of Contents
Introduction The Text 1. Nature Editors' Note Introduction Chapter I: Nature Chapter II: Commodity Chapter III: Beauty Chapter IV: Language Chapter V: Discipline Chapter VI: Idealism Chapter VII: Spirit Chapter VIII: Prospects 2. Addresses The American Scholar The Divinity School Address Literary Ethics,br> The Method of Nature 3. Lectures Man the Reformer Lectures on the Times Introductory Lecture,br> The Conservative The Transcendentalist The Young American Notes Parallel Passages Textual Apparatus Hyphenations Alterations in Copy--Text and Rejected Variants Index
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