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Poems
Emerson, Ralph Waldo (1803-1882)
1.
I POEMS
GOOD-BYE
EACH AND ALL
THE PROBLEM
TO RHEA
THE VISIT
URIEL
THE WORLD-SOUL
THE SPHINX
ALPHONSO OF CASTILE
MITHRIDATES
TO J. W.
DESTINY
GUY
HAMATREYA
[section]
[section]
EARTH-SONG
[section]
THE RHODORA:
THE HUMBLE-BEE
BERRYING
THE SNOW-STORM
WOODNOTES I
WOODNOTES II
MONADNOC
FABLE
ODE
ASTRÆA
ÉTIENNE DE LA BOÉCE
COMPENSATION
FORBEARANCE
THE PARK
FORERUNNERS
SURSUM CORDA
ODE TO BEAUTY
GIVE ALL TO LOVE
TO ELLEN AT THE SOUTH
TO ELLEN
TO EVA
THE AMULET
THINE EYES STILL SHINED
EROS
HERMIONE
INITIAL, DÆMONIC AND CELESTIAL LOVE
1.
I THE INITIAL LOVE
2.
II THE DÆMONIC LOVE
3.
III THE CELESTIAL LOVE
THE APOLOGY
MERLIN I
MERLIN II
BACCHUS
MEROPS
THE HOUSE
SAADI
HOLIDAYS
XENOPHANES
THE DAY'S RATION
BLIGHT
MUSKETAQUID
DIRGE
THRENODY
CONCORD HYMN
2.
II MAY-DAY AND OTHER PIECES
MAY-DAY
THE ADIRONDACS
BRAHMA
NEMESIS
FATE
FREEDOM
ODE
BOSTON HYMN
VOLUNTARIES
1.
I
2.
II
3.
III
4.
IV
5.
V
LOVE AND THOUGHT
UNA
BOSTON
LETTERS
RUBIES
MERLIN'S SONG
THE TEST
SOLUTION
HYMN
NATURE I
NATURE II
THE ROMANY GIRL
DAYS
MY GARDEN
THE CHARTIST'S COMPLAINT
THE TITMOUSE
THE HARP
SEASHORE
SONG OF NATURE
TWO RIVERS
WALDEINSAMKEIT
TERMINUS
THE NUN'S ASPIRATION
APRIL
MAIDEN SPEECH OF THE ÆOLIAN HARP
CUPIDO
THE PAST
IN MEMORIAM
3.
III ELEMENTS AND MOTTOES
EXPERIENCE
COMPENSATION
POLITICS
HEROISM
CHARACTER
CULTURE
FRIENDSHIP
SPIRITUAL LAWS
BEAUTY
MANNERS
ART
UNITY
WORSHIP
PRUDENCE
NATURE
THE INFORMING SPIRIT
CIRCLES
INTELLECT
GIFTS
PROMISE
CARITAS
POWER
WEALTH
ILLUSIONS
4.
IV QUATRAINS AND TRANSLATIONS
A. H.
HUSH!
ORATOR
ARTIST
POET
POET
BOTANIST
GARDENER
FORESTER
NORTHMAN
FROM ALCUIN
EXCELSIOR
S. H.
BORROWING
NATURE
FATE
HOROSCOPE
POWER
CLIMACTERIC
HERI, CRAS, HODIE
MEMORY
LOVE
SACRIFICE
PERICLES
CASELLA
SHAKSPEARE
HAFIZ
NATURE IN LEASTS
ΑΔΑΚΡΥΝ ΝΕΜΟΝΤΑΙ ΑΙΩΝΑ
5.
V APPENDIX
THE POET
1.
I
2.
II
[section]
FRAGMENTS ON THE POET AND THE POETIC GIFT
[There are beggars in Iran and Araby]
1.
I
2.
II
3.
III
4.
IV
5.
V
[Pale genius roves alone]
[I grieve that better souls than mine]
[For thought, and not praise]
[For Fancy's gift]
[Try the might the Muse affords]
[But over all his crowning grace]
[By thoughts I lead]
[And as the light divides the dark]
[I framed his tongue to music]
[For every God]
[For art, for music over-thrilled]
[Hold of the Maker, not the Made]
[That book is good]
[Like vaulters in a circus round]
[For Genius made his cabin wide]
[The atom displaces all atoms beside]
[To transmute crime to wisdom, so to stem]
[He could condense cerulean ether]
[Forbore the ant-hill, shunned to tread,]
[I have no brothers and no peers]
[The brook sings on, but sings in vain]
[He planted where the deluge ploughed]
[For what need I of book or priest]
[Coin the day-dawn into lines]
[Ah, not to me those dreams belong]
[The Muse's hill by Fear is guarded]
[His instant thought a poet spoke]
[If bright the sun, he tarries]
[The Asmodean feat is mine]
[Slighted Minerva's learnéd tongue]
FRAGMENTS ON NATURE AND LIFE
NATURE
[The patient Pan]
[Come search the wood for flowers]
[Where the fungus broad and red]
[For Nature, true and like in every place]
[What all the books of ages paint, I have]
[But never yet the man was found]
[Atom from atom yawns as far]
[When all their blooms the meadows flaunt]
[The sun athwart the cloud thought it no sin]
[For joy and beauty planted it]
[What central flowing forces, say]
[Day by day for her darlings to her much she added more]
[She paints with white and red the moors]
[A score of airy miles will smooth]
THE EARTH
THE HEAVENS
TRANSITION
[Parks and ponds are good by day]
[In Walden wood the chickadee]
[The low December vault in June be lifted high]
THE GARDEN
[Solar insect on the wing]
BIRDS
WATER
NAHANT
SUNRISE
NIGHT IN JUNE
[He lives not who can refuse me]
[Seems, though the soft sheen all enchants]
[Put in, drive home the sightless wedges]
MAIA
[Illusions like the tints of pearl]
[The cold gray down upon the quinces lieth]
[Samson stark, at Dagon's knee]
[But Nature whistled with all her winds]
LIFE
[A train of gay and clouded days]
[No fate, save by the victim's fault, is low]
[Around the man who seeks a noble end]
[From high to higher forces]
[This shining moment is an edifice]
[Roomy Eternity]
[The beggar begs by God's command]
[In the chamber, on the stairs]
[Such another peerless queen]
[Easy to match what others do]
[Of all wit's uses the main one]
[The tongue is prone to lose the way]
[She walked in flowers around my field]
[Friends to me are frozen wine]
[You shall not love me for what daily spends]
[To and fro the Genius flies]
[Love]
[The brave Empedocles, defying fools]
[Tell men what they knew before]
[Him strong Genius urged to roam]
[That each should in his house abide]
[Thou shalt make thy house]
[The archangel Hope]
[As the drop feeds its fated flower]
[Ever the Rock of Ages melts]
[Go if thou wilt, ambrosial flower]
[Yes, sometimes to the sorrow-stricken]
[But if thou do thy best]
[Ascending thorough just degrees]
[From the stores of eldest matter]
[The bard and mystic held me for their own]
[With the key of the secret he marches faster]
SUUM CUIQUE
[If curses be the wage of love]
[When wrath and terror changed Jove's regal port]
[Shun passion, fold the hands of thrift]
[The rules to men made evident]
[On bravely through the sunshine and the showers]
THE BOHEMIAN HYMN
GRACE
INSIGHT
PAN
MONADNOC FROM AFAR
SEPTEMBER
EROS
OCTOBER
PETER'S FIELD
MUSIC
THE WALK
COSMOS
THE MIRACLE
THE WATERFALL
WALDEN
THE ENCHANTER
WRITTEN IN A VOLUME OF GOETHE
RICHES
PHILOSOPHER
INTELLECT
LIMITS
INSCRIPTION FOR A WELL IN MEMORY OF THE MARTYRS OF THE WAR
THE EXILE
[I have an arrow that will find its mark]
6.
VI POEMS OF YOUTH AND EARLY MANHOOD 1823–1834
THE BELL
THOUGHT
PRAYER
[When success exalts thy lot]
[I bear in youth the sad infirmities]
[Be of good cheer, brave spirit; steadfastly]
TO-DAY
FAME
THE SUMMONS
THE RIVER
GOOD HOPE
LINES TO ELLEN
SECURITY
[A dull uncertain brain]
A MOUNTAIN GRAVE
A LETTER
[Day by day returns]
HYMN
SELF-RELIANCE
[Henceforth, please God, forever I forego]
[And when I am entombèd in my place]
[Oh what is Heaven but the fellowship]
[The days pass over me]
WRITTEN IN NAPLES
WRITTEN AT ROME
WEBSTER
FROM THE PHI BETA KAPPA POEM
[Why did all manly gifts in Webster fail]
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354
[Tell men what they knew before]
Tell
men what they knew before;
Paint the prospect from their door.
Poems