list of authors referred to, 381, 382;
special indebtedness, 382;
penetration, borrowing, 383;
method of writing and its results, aided by others, 384;
sayings that seem family property, 385;
passages compared, 385-387;
the tributary streams, 388;
accuracy as to facts, 388;
personalities traceable in him, 389;
place as a thinker, 390;
Platonic anecdote, 391;
preexistence, 391, 392;
mind-moulds, 393;
relying on instinct, 394;
dangers of intuition, 395;
mysticism, 396;
Oriental side, 397;
transcendental mood, 398;
personal identity confused, 399;
a distorting mirror, 400;
distrust of science, 401-403;
style illustrated, 403, 404;
favorite words, 405;
royal imagery, 406;
comments on America, 406, 407;
common property of mankind, 407;
public spirit, solitary workshop, martyrdom from visitors, 408;
white shield invulnerable, 409;
religious attitude, 409-411;
spiritual influx, creed, 412;
clerical relations, 413;
Dr. Hague’s criticism, 413, 414;
ameliorating religious influence, 414;
freedom, 415;
enduring verse and thought, 416, 417;
comparison with Jesus, 417;
sincere manhood, 418;
transparency, 419.
Emerson’s Books:—
Conduct of Life, 229, 237.
English Traits:
the first European
trip, 62;
published, 214;
analysis, 214-220;
penetration, 383;
Teutonic fire,
386.
Essays:
Dickens’s
allusion, 156;
collected, 166.
Essays, second series, 183.
Lectures and Biographical
Sketches, 128, 295, 296, 347.
Letters and Social Aims, 210,
283, 284, 296.
May-day and Other Pieces,
161, 192, 224, 242, 257, 310, 318, 346.
Memoir of Margaret Fuller,
209.
Miscellanies, 302, 303.
Nature, Addresses, and Lectures,
179.
Nature:
resemblance of
extracts from Mary Moody Emerson, 17;
where written,
70;
the Many in One,
73;
first published,
91, 92, 373;
analysis, 93-107;
obscure, 108;
Beauty, 237.
Parnassus:
collected, 280;
Preface, 314;
allusion, 321.
Poems, 293, 310, 318, 339.
Representative Men, 196-209.
Selected Poems, 311, 347.
Society and Solitude, 250.
Emerson’s Essays, Lectures, Sermons,
Speeches, etc.:—
In general:
essays, 73, 88,
91, 92, 310;
income from lectures,
176, 191, 192;
lectures in England,
194-196;
long series, 372;
lecture-room,
374;
plays and lectures,
375;
double duty, 376,
377;
charm, 379.