"The sun just beams into the man's eye, but it shines into the child's eye and heart" from Nature best supports Emerson's claim.
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What does Emerson's Nature says?</h3>
- According to the author, most adults have a relatively limited perspective on life. They are unable to fully comprehend the beauty of nature.
- The only person who can genuinely appreciate nature's beauty is one whose inner and outer senses are balanced and adjusted to one another. Every child possesses this quality, but relatively few men are able to carry it into maturity.
- A person can temporarily transcend their everyday lives and connect with the sublime if they spend time alone in nature, for as by gazing at the stars.
- People take for granted the splendor of the stars because they are visible almost every night. However, a wise person never takes for granted the beauty of nature and never loses their sense of wonder for the world.
Know more about Emerson's Nature brainly.com/question/12252629
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Stopping by the Woods is about death.  How come, he is riding his horse and he knows he is not going to come back.  Winter represents death because its near the end of the year.
The narrator knows he is going to die and he is okay with it.  He takes it slow while riding and takes in the scenery.  Its a depressing poem but Robert Frost is very intelligent in the way he writes his poems
        
                    
             
        
        
        
<span>In Japan today people still feel a strong connection with the samurai.</span>