Authors: Megan Marshall
[>]
managed to “offend”:
ELI,
p. 450.
[>]
“magnetic power” . . . “sympathy and time”:
FLVI,
p. 261.
[>]
“Whoever would preach”: Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, “Emerson as Preacher,” in F. B. Sanborn, ed.,
The Genius and Character of Emerson: Lectures at the Concord School of Philosophy
(Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 1971, reprint of 1885 edition), p. 161.
[>]
“greatly pained”:
FLVI,
p. 287.
[>]
“forget what”: Quoted in
CFI,
p. 195.
[>]
“Margaret alone”:
FLI,
p. 95.
[>]
“born with knives”: RWE, “Historic Notes of Life and Letters in New England,”
Lectures and Biographical Sketches
(Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1886), p. 311.
[>]
“vicious in”: Quoted in Bruce Ronda, ed.,
The Letters of Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
(Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1984), p. 245.
[>]
“the only book”:
ELVII,
p. 245.
[>]
“one third”: Quoted in
CFI,
p. 198.
[>]
“an ignorant”: Quoted in Madelon Bedell,
The Alcotts: Biography of a Family
(New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1980), p. 131.
[>]
“more indecent”: Joseph T. Buckingham, review in the
Boston Courier,
quoted in
CFI,
p. 198.
[>]
“one-sided”: Quoted in
CFI,
p. 198.
[>]
“star of purest”:
FLI,
p. 265.
[>]
“lost in abstractions”:
OMI,
p. 172.
9. “BRINGING MY OPINIONS TO THE TEST”
[>]
“Here is the hostile”:
FLI,
pp. 286–87.
[>]
“It is but a bad”:
FLVI,
p. 293.
[>]
“too young”:
FLIII,
p. 226.
[>]
“faded frocks” . . . “Now that”:
FLI,
p. 258.
[>]
“vegetate” . . . “sunny kindness”:
FLI,
p. 272.
[>]
“had a grand”:
FLI,
p. 285.
[>]
“as soon as you can”:
ELII,
p. 35.
[>]
“poppy & oatmeal”:
ELII,
p. 37.
[>]
“esteemed her “holiness”:
FLI,
p. 328.
[>]
“We lead a life”:
ELII,
p. 41.
[>]
“I am sure”:
FLI,
p. 269.
[>]
privately “schooling” herself:
FLI,
p. 272.
[>]
“the excitement”:
FLI,
p. 272.
[>]
“Waldo’s “Compensation”:
FLI,
p. 285.
[>]
“learning geology”: “Address on Education,” in Stephen E. Whicher, Robert E. Spiller, and Wallace E. Williams, eds.,
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson,
vol. 2, 1836–1838 (Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1964), pp. 195–96.
[>]
“Concord, dear Concord”:
FLI,
p. 283.
[>]
“These black times”:
ELII,
p. 77.
[>]
“peculiar aspects”: “Address on Education,” pp. 195–97.
[>]
“The disease”: Ibid., p. 196.
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“capital secret”: Ibid., p. 202.
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“teach self-trust”: Ibid., p. 199.
[>]
“Amid the swarming”: Ibid., p. 196.
[>]
“
Man Thinking
”: Ralph Waldo Emerson, “The American Scholar,”
Essays and Lectures
(New York: Library of America, 1983), p. 54.
[>]
“willing to communicate”: Laraine R. Fergensen, “Margaret Fuller in the Classroom: The Providence Period,”
Studies in the American Renaissance,
1987 (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia), p. 138.
[>]
“I believe I do”:
FLI,
p. 292.
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“There is room”:
FLI,
p. 288.
[>]
“hearts are right”:
FLI,
p. 292.
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“absolutely torpid”: To Bronson Alcott,
FLI,
p. 287.
[>]
“this experience”:
FLI,
p. 292.
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“antipathy” to worms: Laraine R. Fergensen, “Margaret Fuller as a Teacher in Providence: The School Journal of Ann Brown,”
Studies in the American Renaissance,
1991 (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia), p. 70.
[>]
“spoke upon”: Mary Ware Allen, quoted in
VM,
p. 102.
[>]
“wished to live”: “Margaret Fuller as a Teacher,” p. 102.
[>]
“Daphne, Aspasia, Sappho: Judith Strong Albert, “Margaret Fuller’s Row at the Greene Street School: Early Female Education in Providence, 1837–1839,”
Rhode Island History,
vol. 42, May 1983, p. 46.
[>]
“Lament of Mary”: “Margaret Fuller as a Teacher,” p. 70.
[>]
Princess Victoria’s ascension: Ibid., pp. 67–68.
[>]
“How and when”: Mark Shuffleton, “Margaret Fuller at the Greene Street School: The Journal of Evelina Metcalf,”
Studies in the American Renaissance,
1985 (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia), p. 39.
[>]
“I wish”: Anna Gale, quoted in
CFI,
p. 230.
[>]
“serve two masters”:
FLI,
p. 327.
[>]
“barbarous ignorance”: Quoted in Bell Gale Chevigny,
The Woman and the Myth: Margaret Fuller’s Life and Writings
(Old Westbury, N.Y.: The Feminist Press, 1976), p. 174.
[>]
“miserably prepared”:
FLI,
p. 292.
[>]
“satirical” . . . “I often” . . . “too rough” . . . “I dare”: “Margaret Fuller in the Classroom,” pp. 134–35.
[>]
“we must
think
”: Quoted in
CFI,
p. 231.
[>]
message of “self-trust”: “The American Scholar,” pp. 53–71
passim.
[>]
Emerson’s “sermons”:
OMI,
p. 195.
[>]
“Who would be”:
JMNV,
p. 407.
[>]
“what is any”:
ELII,
p. 82.
[>]
“
O my friends
”:
FLI,
pp. 294–95.
[>]
“Mr. Hedge’s Club”:
ELII,
p. 95.
[>]
club of the “Like-Minded”: JFC, quoted in
CFI,
p. 182.
[>]
“all-day party”: Dolores Bird Carpenter, ed.,
The
Selected Letters of Lidian Jackson Emerson
(Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1987), p. 59.
[>]
“the progress”: Tess Hoffman, “Miss Fuller Among the Literary Lions: Two Essays Read at ‘The Coliseum’ in 1838,”
Studies in the American Renaissance,
1988 (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia), p. 45.
[>]
“who knows”:
ELII,
p. 95.
[>]
“plying the “Spiritualists”:
Selected Letters of Lidian Jackson Emerson,
p. 59.
[>]
“incompleteness” in the reasoning: “Miss Fuller Among the Literary Lions,” p. 51.
[>]
“immense wants”: Ibid., p. 46.
[>]
“a woman may”: Ibid., p. 50.
[>]
“marriage, mantua-making”:
FLVI,
p. 279.
[>]
“Too bright”: “Miss Fuller Among the Literary Lions,” p. 50.
[>]
“the idea”: Ibid.
[>]
“I feel”:
FLI,
p. 302.
[>]
“I grow”:
FLI,
p. 325.
[>]
“school for”:
FLI,
p. 322.
[>]
“those who would reform”:
FLI,
p. 287.
[>]
“This was just”:
FLI,
pp. 322–23.
[>]
“there were no”:
FLI,
p. 304.
[>]
“It is no longer”:
FLI,
p. 316.
[>]
“I
must
leave”:
FLI,
p. 295.
[>]
“Holiness” and “Heroism”:
FLI,
pp. 327–28.
[>]
“all the scandal” . . . “a poor”:
FLI,
p. 293.
[>]
“You must not”:
FLI,
p. 318.
[>]
“she’d been expelled:
FLII,
p. 149.
[>]
“As to transcendentalism”:
FLI,
pp. 314–15.
[>]
“nothing striped”:
FLI,
p. 311.
[>]
“the heroic element”:
FLII,
p. 41.
[>]
“I keep on”:
FLI,
p. 327.
[>]
“three precious”:
FLI,
p. 320.
[>]
“two years”:
FLI,
p. 349.
[>]
“that I may”:
FLI,
p. 320.
[>]
“There is a beauty”:
FLI,
p. 331.
[>]
“devote to writing”:
FLI,
p. 349.
[>]
“Its superior tone”:
ELII,
p. 135.
[>]
“it is regal”:
FLI,
p. 332.
[>]
“We are the children”: “Margaret Fuller as a Teacher,” p. 91.
[>]
“those means”:
FLI,
p. 327.
[>]
“gabbled and simpered”:
FLI,
p. 351.
[>]
any “May-gales”: “Margaret Fuller as a Teacher,” p. 90.
[>]
“eat up”:
ELII,
p. 143.
[>]
“as handsome”:
ELII,
p. 135.
[>]
“I am better”:
FLI,
p. 328.
[>]
“It seems”:
ELII,
p. 168. This passage may have been the germ of Emerson’s well-known statement “Men descend to meet,” in his essay “The Over-Soul.”
Essays and Lectures
, p. 391.
[>]
“persons except”:
ELII,
p. 129.
[>]
“Devoutly” . . . “Always”:
FLI,
pp. 328, 337.
[>]
“For a hermit”:
ELII,
p. 143.
[>]
“Will you commission”:
ELII,
p. 169.
[>]
“I heard”:
FLI,
p. 352.
[>]
“a new young man”:
FLI,
pp. 341–42.
[>]
“full of affection”:
FLI,
p. 342.
[>]
“elegantly bound”: “Margaret Fuller at the Greene Street School,” p. 45.
[>]
“vestal solitudes”:
FLI,
p. 351.
[>]
“I do not wish”:
FLI,
pp. 353–55
passim.
10. “WHAT WERE WE BORN TO DO?”
[>]
“all the value”:
FLVI,
p. 312.
[>]
“pitiful” and “clumsy”:
FLI,
p. 300.
[>]
“Lines” . . . “F”: “LINES–On the Death of C.C.E.,”
Daily Centinel and Gazette,
vol. 1, no. 32, May 17, 1836.
[>]
“huntsman’s dart”: From “Eagles and Doves,” in John Sullivan Dwight, ed.,
Select Minor Poems, Translated from the German of Goethe and Schiller
(Boston: Hilliard, Gray, and Co., 1839), pp. 104–5.
[>]
“To a Golden Heart”: Ibid., p. 31.
[>]
“there is reason”: Ibid., p. xv.
[>]
“in course”: Ibid.
[>]
“lying in heaps”:
FLVI,
p. 309.
[>]
“monologue” by Goethe: MF translation,
Conversations with Goethe in the Last Years of His Life, Translated from the German of Eckermann
(Boston: J. Munroe, 1839), p. viii.
[>]
“He knew both”: Ibid., p. xx.
[>]
“it was all tea”:
FLVI,
p. 309.
[>]
“hackneyed moral”:
FLII,
p. 56.
[>]
“the disorders”:
FLIII,
p. 85.
[>]
“is the natural”: MF, “The Great Lawsuit. Man
versus
Men. Woman
versus
Women,”
Dial,
vol. 4, no. 1, July 1843, p. 35.
[>]
“as if an intellectual”:
FLII,
p. 32.
[>]
“a brilliant”:
ELII,
pp. 202–3.
[>]
“daunts & chills”:
ELII,
p. 197.
[>]
“ransom more time”:
FLIII,
p. 198.
[>]
“speed the pen”:
ELII,
p. 203.
[>]
threw herself “unremittingly”: Robert N. Hudspeth, “Margaret Fuller’s 1839 Journal: Trip to Bristol,”
Harvard Library Bulletin,
vol. 27, 1979, p. 454.
[>]
begun negotiations:
FLII,
pp. 113–14.
[>]
practice of billing:
FLI,
p. 350.
[>]
“the richest”: “Margaret Fuller’s 1839 Journal,” p. 456.
[>]
“ill stocked” library: Ibid., p. 457.
[>]
“destitute of all”: Ibid., p. 464.
[>]
“live wire”: Quoted in
CFI,
p. 271.
[>]
“unsustained” and “uncertain”: “Margaret Fuller’s 1839 Journal,” p. 464.