Parnassus

Front Cover
Ardent Media, 1972 - 534 pages

From inside the book

Contents

Solitude
6
Cloud
7
It is not to be thought of that
9
Daffodills
15
Tacking Ship off Shore
21
Death of the Flowers
29
Winter Night
31
Death of the Old Year
47
Wordsworth
221
HISTORIC
225
Indians
246
Tom Taylor
255
Seven Ages
256
Grasshopper
257
Shakspeare
265
Herb Rosemary To
267

My Mothers Picture
52
Muse
57
Othellos Defence
64
Peasants Return
75
Pilots Daughter
82
Eagle
93
Herbert
95
How oft when thou
99
Ships at
122
O how much more doth
133
Flowers at Cave of Staffa
134
Sonnet on First Looking into Chapmans Homer
139
Thought
146
Thanatopsis
154
Life and Death
161
The Spacious Firmament on High
165
Under the Portrait of Milton
166
Matins
176
Touchstone
180
Pilgrimage
182
Pulley
190
Coleridge
195
Abraham Lincoln
202
Shakspeare
204
Bannockburn
211
Bunker Hill
219
Forging of the Anchor
277
Gladiator
288
Lines in a Ladys Album
306
Nebuchadnezzar
354
Joanna
418
Liberty
429
Milky Way
435
Boatie Rows
441
Morning
444
Nymph Mourning her Fawn
457
Collins
459
Shakspeare
462
Thyrsis
463
Matthew Arnold
475
Atheism
497
H
502
Bret Harte
503
Song of the Parcæ
510
Antony and the Soothsayer
517
PAGE
525
Julia R C Dorr
527
Helvellyn
528
Bryant
531
67
533
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1972)

Known primarily as the leader of the philosophical movement transcendentalism, which stresses the ties of humans to nature, Ralph Waldo Emerson, American poet and essayist, was born in Boston in 1803. From a long line of religious leaders, Emerson became the minister of the Second Church (Unitarian) in 1829. He left the church in 1832 because of profound differences in interpretation and doubts about church doctrine. He visited England and met with British writers and philosophers. It was during this first excursion abroad that Emerson formulated his ideas for Self-Reliance. He returned to the United States in 1833 and settled in Concord, Massachusetts. He began lecturing in Boston. His first book, Nature (1836), published anonymously, detailed his belief and has come to be regarded as his most significant original work on the essence of his philosophy of transcendentalism. The first volume of Essays (1841) contained some of Emerson's most popular works, including the renowned Self-Reliance. Emerson befriended and influenced a number of American authors including Henry David Thoreau. It was Emerson's practice of keeping a journal that inspired Thoreau to do the same and set the stage for Thoreau's experiences at Walden Pond. Emerson married twice (his first wife Ellen died in 1831 of tuberculosis) and had four children (two boys and two girls) with his second wife, Lydia. His first born, Waldo, died at age six. Emerson died in Concord on April 27, 1882 at the age of 78 due to pneumonia and is buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Massachusetts.

Bibliographic information