Before their recognition, fame, and influence, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, and Nathaniel Hawthorne are men searching for answers, seeking their place amongst the vast and complicated ecosystem that surrounds their minds and bodies. The natural world is breathtaking, poetic, yet harsh and unforgiving. Each man, in his own way, contemplates his place amongst the natural world through his philosophizing, his scientific study, his poetry, or his fiction. In nature, Emerson finds spirituality and peace. His deep immersion in the natural world brings him one step closer to God and creation. Thoreau finds masculinity, isolation, and beauty. He is eager to appear rugged and uses nature to prove his worth...
The Native American or the American Indians are the indigenous people of the continent and their lit...
The Nature has always been an associating determinant and a role player in the plot, narration and h...
The real question at hand with the study of any work of prose literature is not related at all to th...
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman depict a removal...
Some authors create memorable works because they develop a passion for their area of focus. For exam...
Following a general historical discussion of the idea of nature, the study continues with an analysi...
Following a general historical discussion of the idea of nature, the study continues with an analysi...
American romantic poetry is the poetry of the Romantic era, a period in which artistic, literary, mu...
Since nature inherently contains moral truth, knowledge and wisdom, the artist should rely on it, ra...
Nature and natural phenomena always inspire scientists, saints, poets and philosophers throughout ci...
The article investigates how the concept of nature is metaphorically construed in the writin...
By examining a collection of such works as Walt Whitman\u27s Song of Myself\u27 and Ralph Waldo Eme...
Thoreau’s descriptions of natural phenomena display the care and acuteness of scientific observation...
Postmodern “Intersubjective” approaches to psychology and psychotherapy observe that a central “myth...
In 1849, Ralph Waldo Emerson gave Nathaniel Hawthorne a presentation copy of his second edition of t...
The Native American or the American Indians are the indigenous people of the continent and their lit...
The Nature has always been an associating determinant and a role player in the plot, narration and h...
The real question at hand with the study of any work of prose literature is not related at all to th...
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman depict a removal...
Some authors create memorable works because they develop a passion for their area of focus. For exam...
Following a general historical discussion of the idea of nature, the study continues with an analysi...
Following a general historical discussion of the idea of nature, the study continues with an analysi...
American romantic poetry is the poetry of the Romantic era, a period in which artistic, literary, mu...
Since nature inherently contains moral truth, knowledge and wisdom, the artist should rely on it, ra...
Nature and natural phenomena always inspire scientists, saints, poets and philosophers throughout ci...
The article investigates how the concept of nature is metaphorically construed in the writin...
By examining a collection of such works as Walt Whitman\u27s Song of Myself\u27 and Ralph Waldo Eme...
Thoreau’s descriptions of natural phenomena display the care and acuteness of scientific observation...
Postmodern “Intersubjective” approaches to psychology and psychotherapy observe that a central “myth...
In 1849, Ralph Waldo Emerson gave Nathaniel Hawthorne a presentation copy of his second edition of t...
The Native American or the American Indians are the indigenous people of the continent and their lit...
The Nature has always been an associating determinant and a role player in the plot, narration and h...
The real question at hand with the study of any work of prose literature is not related at all to th...