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The Metaphysics of Democracy: Leaves of Grass , 1855 and 1856 Chapter 1.
The elaboration of Whitman's metaphysics in part I begins in chapter 1 with a discussion of how Whitman
—Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Fate" CHAPTER 1 "My Voice Goes after What My Eyes Cannot Reach": Pragmatic Language
I loaf and invite my soul, I lean and loafe at my ease....observing a spear of summer grass. ( 1) Clearly
Contents Introduction Chapter 1. Historical Background Chapter 2. Time Line Chapter 3.
characteristics, a topic of great interest to nineteenth-century Americans, which is discussed in chapter 1
The contradiction, if real, needs explanation and is addressed in chapter 1.
hope that the reader will not be disconcerted by the interweaving of fact and supposition in chapter 1.
writing of this book, in what proved to be the final summer of his life, will always be remembered. 1.
Chapter 1. Things of the Earth Chapter 2. The Fall of the Redwood Tree Chapter 3.
I take as my point of departure in chapter 1 a poem from the second (1856) edition of —"This Compost"
that has stopped working in this first movement of the poem, which encompasses the entirety of Section 1,
Emerson transmits the Romantic-transcendentalist party line on language theory in three key claims: 1.
She is sitting in her room thinking of a story now I'm telling you the story she is thinking. (1) In