Sir Walter Raleigh (essay) - Printed Sources

Printed Sources

  • Sir Walter Raleigh (ISBN 978-1603550611)
  • My Thoughts are Murder to the State by H.D. Thoreau (ISBN 978-1434804266)
  • The Higher Law: Thoreau on Civil Disobedience and Reform (ISBN 978-0691118765)
  • Collected Essays and Poems by Henry David Thoreau (ISBN 978-1-88301195-6)
Henry David Thoreau
Speeches
  • Remarks After the Hanging of John Brown (1859)
Essays
  • The Service (1840)
  • A Walk to Wachusett (1842)
  • Paradise (to be) Regained (1843)
  • Sir Walter Raleigh (1844)
  • Herald of Freedom (1844)
  • Wendell Phillips Before the Concord Lyceum (1845)
  • Reform and the Reformers (1846–48)
  • Thomas Carlyle and His Works (1847)
  • Resistance to Civil Government, or Civil Disobedience (1849)
  • Slavery in Massachusetts (1854)
  • A Plea for Captain John Brown (1859)
  • The Last Days of John Brown (1860)
  • Walking (1861)
  • Life Without Principle (1863)
Books
  • A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers (1849)
  • Walden (1854)
Related
  • Thoreau Society
  • The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau
  • Wheeler-Minot Farmhouse
  • Excursions (1863)

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Famous quotes containing the words printed and/or sources:

    All that are printed and bound are not books; they do not necessarily belong to letters, but are oftener to be ranked with the other luxuries and appendages of civilized life. Base wares are palmed off under a thousand disguises.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Even healthy families need outside sources of moral guidance to keep those tensions from imploding—and this means, among other things, a public philosophy of gender equality and concern for child welfare. When instead the larger culture aggrandizes wife beaters, degrades women or nods approvingly at child slappers, the family gets a little more dangerous for everyone, and so, inevitably, does the larger world.
    Barbara Ehrenreich (20th century)