内容注記 |
Summer on the lakes, in 1843 -- Woman in the nineteenth century -- Short published works -- New England, 1839-1844. Translator's preface: conversations with Goethe in the last years of his life ; A short essay on critics ; A record of impressions: produced by the exhibition of Mr. Allston's pictures in the summer of 1839 ; The magnolia of Lake Pontchartrain ; Leila ; Yuca filamentosa ; From Bettine Brentano and her friend Gunderode -- New York, 1844-1846. Emerson's essays ; French novelists of the day: Balzac, George Sand, Eugene Sue ; Review of Etherology; or The Philosophy of Mesmerism and Phrenology by J. Stanley Grimes ; Our city charities ; Prevalent idea that politeness is too great a luxury to be given to the poor ; Review of Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave by Frederick Douglass ; The Irish character ; Review of the Tales by Edgar Allan Poe ; The wrongs of American women. the duty of American women ; Review of Poems by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ; Review of The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley ; 1st January, 1846 ; Review of Mosses from an Old Manse by Nathaniel Hawthorne ; Review of Memoirs, Official and Personal by Thomas L. M'Kenney ; Review of Ormond; Or, the Secret Witness and Wieland; Or, the Transformation by Charles Brockden Brown ; Farewell ; American literature: its position in the present time, and prospects for the future -- Europe, 1846-1850. Letters from England ; Liverpool and Manchester ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. V ; Scotland, Mary Queen of Scots, and Ben Lomond ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. X ; London and Paris, French theater and literature ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. XIII ; Paris, Lyons, Naples ; To a daughter of Italy ; Poem in the People's Journal ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. XVIII ; American tourists and European and American politics ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. XIX ; Living in "the real Rome" ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. XXV ; The revolutions of 1848 in Italy ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. XXVI ; Revolutionary Rome ; Things and thoughts in Europe XXVIII ; Proclamation of the Roman Republic ; Undaunted Rome ; "I write you from barricaded Rome" ; Things and thoughts in Europe no. XXXIII ; The French army bombs and occupies Rome ; Italy ; "The next revolution, here and elsewhere, will be radical" -- Unpublished writings. "Possent quia posse videntur" (c. pre-fall 1819) ; Autobiographical romance (1840) ; Fictional autobiographical fragment (c. 1841-42) ; A credo (1842) ; To Beethoven (1843) ; Chamois (c. 1844) -- Journals. Poems and selections from journal fragments (1833-1844) ; From S.M. Fuller's bouquet--journal (c. 1836-1837) ; From reflections journal (c. 1839) ; From bound journal (c. 1839-40) ; From 1842 journal (August 18-September 25, 1842) ; From October 1842 journal ; From journal fragments (c. 1840, 1844) ; From manuscript tracing journal (1844) ; From Italy 1849 journal -- Letters. To Timothy Fuller, April 24, 1817? ; First letter ; To Timothy Fuller, January 16, 1820 ; "I do not like Sarah, call me Margaret alone" ; To the Marquis de Lafayette, June 16, 1825? ; "The avenues of glory are seldom accessible" ; To Susan Prescott, July 11, 1825 ; "I am determined on distinction" ; To James Freeman Clarke, August 7, 1832 ; "I wish to talk with you now about the Germans" ; To James Freeman Clarke, April 19, 1836 ; Writing a biography of Goethe ; To Caroline Sturgis, November 16, 1837 ; Defending transcendentalism ; To Ralph Waldo Emerson, March 1, 1838 ; "I want to see you and still more to hear you" ; To Lidian Jackson Emerson, August 19, 1838 ; "Fret not that kindest heart" ; To Sophia Ripley?, August 27, 1839 ; "My plan for the proposed conversations" ; To unknown correspondent, November 25, 1839 ; "My class is singularly prosperous" ; To William Henry Channing, March 22, 1840 ; "When I write, it is into another world" ; To Ralph Waldo Emerson, September 29, 1840 ; "Did you not ask for a 'foe' in your friend?" ; To Henry David Thoreau, December 1, 1840 ; Rejecting a Dial submission ; To William Henry Channing, April 5, 1841 ; Beethoven's Fifth Symphony ; To Ralph Waldo Emerson, April 9, 1842 ; Handing over editorship of The Dial ; To Sophia Peabody, June 4, 1842 ; Peabody's wedding to Nathaniel Hawthorne ; To George T. David, December 17, 1842 ; "I have not lived my own life" ; To Richard F. Fuller, July 29, 1843 ; Visiting the Territory of Wisconsin ; To Caroline Sturgis, May 3, 1844 ; "The carbuncle" ; To Ralph Waldo Emerson, July 13, 1844 ; "You are intellect, I am life" ; To Elizabeth Hoar, October [28?], 1844 ; Visiting Sing Sing Prison ; To William Henry Channing, November 17, 1844 ; Woman of the Nineteenth Century ; To Eugene Fuller, March 9, 1845 ; Horace Greeley and the New-York Tribune ; To James Nathan, May 4?, 1845 ; "I feel chosen among women" ; To James Nathan, May 23, 1845 ; "An approaching separation, presses on my mind" ; To Evert A. Duyckinck, June 28, 1846 ; "I shall not alter a line or a word" ; To Caroline Sturgis, November 16?, 1846 ; England and Paris ; To Ralph Waldo Emerson, November 16, 1846 ; Meeting Thomas Carlyle ; To Elizabeth Hoar, January 18, 1847 ; "You wished to hear of George Sand" ; To Marcus and Rebecca Spring, April 10, 1847 ; "I wish to be free and absolutely true to my nature" ; To Richard F. Fuller, October 29, 1847 ; "I find myself so happy here alone and free" ; To William Henry Channing, March 29, 1848 ; Revolution ; To Jane Tuckerman King, April 1848 ; "I have done... things that may invoke censure" ; To Costanza Arconati Visconti, May 27, 1848 ; "Everything confirms me in my radicalism" ; To Charles King Newcom, June 22, 1848 ; "Poor one, alone, all alone!" ; To Giovanni Angelo Ossoli, August 22, 1898 ; Waiting to deliver her child ; To Giovanni Angelo Ossoli, September 7, 1848 ; "This dear baby in my arms" ; To Giuseppe Mazzini, March 3, 1849 ; "The best friends, ... must be women" ; To William Henry Channing, March 10, 1849 ; "I am not what I should be on this earth" ; To Caroline Sturgis Tappan, March 16, 1849 ; "No secret can be kept" ; To Giovanni Angelo Ossoli, June 1849 ; "In the event we both die" ; To Ralph Waldo Emerson, June 10, 1849 ; "Rome is being destroyed" ; To Costanza Arconati Visconti, August 1849 ; "I have united my destiny with that of an obscure young man" ; To Caroline Sturgis Tappan, August28, 1849 ; "On the brink of losing my little boy" ; To Margarett Crane Fuller, August 31, 1849 ; "It was only great love for you that kept me silent" ; To Costanza Arconati Visconti, October 16, 1849 ; "He is to me a source of ineffable joys" ; To Emely Story, c. November 1849 ; "Ossoli is forming some taste for books" ; To Elizabeth Barrett Browning, December 6, 1849 ; Remembering Edgar Allan Poe ; To William Henry Channing, December 17, 1849 ; "This false state of society" ; To Arthur Hugh Clough, February 16, 1850 ; "I like also much living with my husband" ; To Costanza Arconati Visconti, April 6, 1850 ; " I am absurdly fearful about this voyage" ; To Lewis Cass Jr., May 2, 1850 ; "I leave Italy with profound regret" -- Chronology -- Note on the texts -- Notes -- General index -- Index of Fuller's poetry titles and first lines.
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