It was included in 1876 in the first volume ( Miscellanies) of the Little Classic Edition of Emerson's writings, in 1883 in the first volume ( Nature, Addresses, and Lectures) of the Riverside Edition, in 1903 in the first volume ( Nature, Addresses, and Lectures) of the Centenary Edition, and in 1971 in the first volume ( Nature, Addresses, and Lectures) of the Collected Works published by the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. (The second edition of this collection was published in Boston in 1856 by Phillips, Sampson, under the title Miscellanies Embracing Nature, Addresses, and Lectures.) Nature was published in London in 1844 in Nature, An Essay. This second edition was printed from the plates of the collection Nature Addresses, and Lectures, published by Munroe in September 1849. A new edition (also published by Munroe, with Emerson paying the printing costs, his usual arrangement with Munroe) appeared in December of 1849. The lengthy essay was first published in Boston by James Munroe and Company in September of 1836. In writing Nature, Emerson drew upon material from his journals, sermons, and lectures. ![]() Thoreau's "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers"Īs he returned from Europe in 1833, Emerson had already begun to think about the book that would eventually be published under the title Nature. ![]() Selected Chronology of Thoreau's Writings.Emerson's "The Divinity School Address". ![]()
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