- All's Well That Ends Well
- Antony and Cleopatra
- As You Like It
- The Comedy of Errors
- Coriolanus
- Cymbeline
- Hamlet
- Henry IV, Part 1
- Henry IV, Part 2
- Henry V
- Henry VI, Part 1
- Henry VI, Part 2
- Henry VI, Part 3
- Henry VIII
- Julius Caesar
- King John
- King Lear
- Love's Labor's Lost
- A Lover's Complaint
- Macbeth
- Measure for Measure
- The Merchant of Venice
- The Merry Wives of Windsor
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Othello
- Pericles
- The Rape of Lucrece
- Richard II
- Richard III
- Romeo and Juliet
- Shakespeare's Sonnets
- The Taming of the Shrew
- The Tempest
- Timon of Athens
- Titus Andronicus
- Troilus and Cressida
- Twelfth Night
- The Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Venus and Adonis
- The Winter's Tale
In the essay’s final chapter, Emerson addresses the rampant disunity he sees in society. Throughout “Nature,” he’s stressed that all things are interconnected and meant to be in alignment—for instance, people and nature are intimately connected, and people are supposed to live in harmonious unity with the natural world. And because all things are connected, when people are disconnected from themselves, it affects this broader unity of all things. This, Emerson stresses, is why the world “lies broken and in heaps.”
Here, Emerson encourages the reader to focus on coming back into unity within themselves by “satisf[ying] all the demands…