The Wisdom of Words: Language, Theology, and Literature in the New England Renaissance |
Contents
Chapter One The Word of God within | 15 |
Chapter Two Transcendental Logic From | 35 |
Chapter Three The Example of Emerson From | 75 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic Aids to Reflection ambiguity American Renaissance Andover Andrews Norton believed Bible biblical Biblical Criticism Boston Bushnell's cetology Channing Christ Christian Coleridge Coleridge's concepts concern contemporaries Criticism declared discourse divine doctrine Elizabeth Peabody Emerson England epistemology essay example expression faith Feidelson guage Harvard Hawthorne and Melville Hawthorne's Henry Horace Bushnell human Ibid ideas imagination important intellectual interest Ishmael James Marsh Joel Porte Kraitsir language of nature liberal literary literature Lockean logical man's meaning Melville's mind Moby Dick moral Moses Stuart natural facts natural world nineteenth century Norton Oegger Peabody philosophical philosophy of language Pierre poet poetic poetry Ralph Waldo Emerson readers Reed Reed's religion religious revealed romantic scholars sense spiritual Stuart study of language suggested Swedenborg Swedenborgian symbolic Theodore Parker theologians theological theory things Thoreau thought Transcendentalism transcendentalists Trench Trinitarians truth understanding Unitarian University Press vision vocabulary Walden whale words writing York