The Spirit of the Huckleberry: Sensuousness in Henry ThoreauUniversity of Alberta, 1984 - 145 pagina's Thoreau's delight in being attuned to each sound, sight, flavour, touch and taste of nature is pervasive in his writings. Victor Friesen looks at the implications of Thoreau's sensuous approach to nature throughout his life. |
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Inhoudsopgave
A Body All Sentient | 13 |
A Horse to Himself | 34 |
A Taste of Huckleberries | 49 |
Sauce to This Worlds Dish | 65 |
An Appointment with a Beech Tree | 84 |
Hearing Beyond the Range of Sound | 106 |
The Answered Question | 123 |
Notes | 137 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
20 vols animal appears autumn beauty becomes bird bird songs Boston chapter color concern Concord consciousness describes earth elsewhere essay excursion experience feels fish fragrance gives hear heaven Henry David Thoreau Henry Thoreau Houghton Mifflin huckleberry immersed instance Journal kind kinship landscape living look M. H. Abrams Maine woods man's Merrimack Rivers metaphysical poets Moby-Dick Mount Katahdin mystic nature's notes notion outdoor passage perceive phenomenon pine plants poem primitive Ralph Waldo Emerson refers river scent scientific season seems sensations sensuous sight smell song sound speaks style suggests swamp synesthesia taste tells things thinking Thoreau finds Thoreau says Thoreau writes thought Tints tion tree unconscious University VIII Walden edn Walden Pond walks Walter Harding wants wilderness William Wordsworth wind winter wishes wood thrush words Writings of Henry XVII XVIII