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Ralph Waldo Emerson

 
Who2 Biography: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Philosopher / Clergyman / Orator
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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  • Born: 25 May 1803
  • Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts
  • Died: 27 April 1882
  • Best Known As: A founder of Transcendentalism

Ralph Waldo Emerson's father was the seventh in an unbroken line of ministers dating back to Puritan days, and after attending Harvard Emerson himself became a Unitarian minister. After the death of his young wife and two elder brothers, Emerson began to doubt his faith and in 1832 resigned his ministry. Eventually he settled in Concord, Massachusetts, where he lived most of the rest of his life thinking, writing and speaking. Emerson remains important in American history as a founder of the school of thought known as Transcendentalism. Its chief features were a reliance on intuition over cold scientific reason, a belief that the natural world held spiritual truths, and an optimistic view of the human spirit. Emerson was known as a stirring speaker, eventually earning the sobriquet "the Sage of Concord."

Early in Emma Lazarus's career, Emerson was a mentor and supporter of her poetry.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Ralph Waldo Emerson, lithograph by Leopold Grozelier, 1859
(click to enlarge)
Ralph Waldo Emerson, lithograph by Leopold Grozelier, 1859 (credit: Courtesy of The Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.)
(born May 25, 1803, Boston, Mass., U.S. — died April 27, 1882, Concord) U.S. poet, essayist, and lecturer. Emerson graduated from Harvard University and was ordained a Unitarian minister in 1829. His questioning of traditional doctrine led him to resign the ministry three years later. He formulated his philosophy in Nature (1836); the book helped initiate New England Transcendentalism, a movement of which he soon became the leading exponent. In 1834 he moved to Concord, Mass., the home of his friend Henry David Thoreau. His lectures on the proper role of the scholar and the waning of the Christian tradition caused considerable controversy. In 1840, with Margaret Fuller, he helped launch The Dial, a journal that provided an outlet for Transcendentalist ideas. He became internationally famous with his Essays (1841, 1844), including "Self-Reliance." Representative Men (1850) consists of biographies of historical figures. The Conduct of Life (1860), his most mature work, reveals a developed humanism and a full awareness of human limitations. His Poems (1847) and May-Day (1867) established his reputation as a major poet.

For more information on Ralph Waldo Emerson, visit Britannica.com.

Biography: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) was the most thought-provoking American cultural leader of the mid-19th century. In his unorthodox ideas and actions he represented a minority of Americans, but by the end of his life he was considered a sage.

Though Ralph Waldo Emerson's origins were promising, his path to eminence was by no means easy. He was born in Boston on May 25, 1803, of a fairly well-known New England family. His father was a prominent Boston minister. However, young Emerson was only 8 when his father died and left the family to face hard times. The genteel poverty which the Emerson family endured did not prevent it from sending the promising boy to the Boston Latin School, where he received the best basic education of his day. At 14 he enrolled in Harvard College. As a scholarship boy, he studied more and relaxed less than some of his classmates. He won several minor prizes for his writing. When he was 17, he started keeping a journal and continued it for over half a century.

Unitarian Minister

Emerson was slow in finding himself. After graduation from Harvard he taught at the school of his brother William. Gradually he moved toward the ministry. He undertook studies at the Harvard Divinity School, meanwhile continuing his journal and other writing. In 1826 he began his career as a Unitarian minister. Appropriately, Unitarianism was the creed of the questioner; in particular it questioned the divine nature of the Trinity. Emerson received several offers before an unusually attractive one presented itself: the junior pastorship at Boston's noted Second Church, with the promise that it would quickly become the senior pastorship. His reputation spread swiftly. Soon he was chosen chaplain of the Massachusetts Senate, and he was elected to the Boston School Committee.

Emerson's personal life flowered even more than his professional one, for he fell in love, deeply in love, for the only time in his life. He wooed and won a charming New Hampshire girl named Ellen Tucker. Their wedding, in September 1829, marked the start of an idyllic marriage. But it was all too short, for she died a year and a half later, leaving Emerson desolate. Though he tried to find consolation in his religion, he was unsuccessful. As a result, his religious doubts developed. Even the permissive creed of Unitarianism seemed to him to be a shackle. In September 1832 he resigned his pastorate; according to his farewell sermon he could no longer believe in celebrating Holy Communion.

Emerson's decision to leave the ministry was the more difficult because it left him with no other work to do. After months of floundering and even sickness, he scraped together enough money to take a 10-month tour of Europe. He hoped that his travels would give him the perspective he needed. They did, but only to the extent of confirming what he did not want rather than what he wanted.

Professional Lecturer

However, the times were on Emerson's side, for he found on his return to America that a new institution was emerging that held unique promise for him. This was the lyceum, a system of lecturing which started in the late 1820s, established itself in the 1830s, and rose to great popularity during the next 2 decades. The local lecture clubs that sprang up discovered that they had to pay for the best lecturers, Emerson among them. Emerson turned the lyceum into his unofficial pulpit and in the process earned at least a modest stipend. He spoke to his audiences with great, if unorthodox, effectiveness. They saw before them a tall, thin Yankee with slightly aquiline features whose words sometimes baffled but often uplifted them. After a few seasons he organized his own lecture courses as a supplement to his lyceum lectures. For example, during the winter of 1837-1838 he offered the Boston public a group of 10 lectures on "human culture" and earned more than $500. Equally to the point, his lectures grew into essays and books, and these he published from the early 1840s on.

Emerson's Creed

As a transcendentalist, Emerson spoke out against materialism, formal religion, and slavery. He could not have found targets better designed to offend the mass of Americans, most of whom considered making money a major purpose in life and church and churchgoing a mainstay and, until they faced the hard fact of the Civil War, either supported slavery or were willing to let it alone. But Emerson spoke of slavery in the context of the Fugitive Slave Law (1850), saying, in one of his rare bursts of profanity, "I will not obey it, by God."

Emerson, however, was not merely against certain things; he both preached and exemplified a positive doctrine. He became America's leading transcendentalist; that is, he believed in a reality and a knowledge that transcended the everyday reality Americans were accustomed to. He believed in the integrity of the individual: "Trust thyself," he urged in one of his famous phrases. He believed in a spiritual universe governed by a mystic Over-soul with which each individual soul should try to harmonize. Touchingly enough, he believed in America. Though he ranked as his country's most searching critic, he helped as much as anyone to establish the "American identity." He not only called out for a genuinely American literature but also helped inaugurate it through his own writings. In addition, he espoused the cause of American music and American art; as a matter of fact, his grand purpose was to assist in the creation of an indigenous American national culture.

Publishing His Ideas

His first two books were brilliant. He had published a pamphlet, Nature, in 1836, which excited his fellow transcendentalists; but now he issued two volumes of essays for a broader public, Essays, First Series, in 1841 and Essays, Second Series, in 1844. Their overarching subjects were man, nature, and God. In such pieces as "Self-reliance," "Spiritual Laws," "Nature," "The Poet," and "The Over-soul," Emerson expounded on the innate nobility of man, the joys of nature and their spiritual significance, and the sort of deity omnipresent in the universe. The tone of the essays was optimistic, but Emerson did not neglect the gritty realities of life. In such essays as "Compensation" and "Experience," he tried to suggest how to deal with human losses and failings.

Whether he wrote prose or verse, Emerson was a poet with a poet's gift of metaphor. Both his lectures and his published works were filled from the first with telling phrases, with wisdom startlingly expressed. His next book, after the second series of essays, was a volume of his poems. They proved to be irregular in form and movingly individual in expression. After that came more than one remarkable volume of prose. In Representative Men: Seven Lectures (1850) Emerson pondered the uses of great men, devoting individual essays to half a dozen figures, including Plato, Shakespeare, and Goethe. English Traits (1856) resulted from an extended visit to Great Britain. In this volume Emerson anatomized the English people and their culture. His approach was impressionistic, but the result was the best book by an American on the subject up to that time.

Meanwhile, Emerson had been immersed - sometimes willingly, sometimes not - in things other than literature. He had found a second wife, pale and serene, in Lydia Jackson of Plymouth. He had married her in 1835 and got from her the comfort of love, if not its passion. They had four children, one of whom, Waldo, died when he was a little boy; the others outlived their eminent father. As Emerson's family life expanded, so did his friendships. After leaving his pastorate in Boston, he had moved to nearby Concord, where he stayed the rest of his life. In Concord he met a prickly young Harvard graduate who became his disciple, friend, and occasional adversary: Henry David Thoreau. Emerson added others to his circle, becoming as he did so the nexus of the transcendentalist movement. Among his close friends were Bronson Alcott, George Ripley, and Theodore Parker.

Emerson's public life also expanded. During the 1850s he was drawn deeply into the struggle against slavery. Though he found some of the abolitionists almost as distasteful as the slaveholders, he knew where his place had to be. The apolitical Emerson became a Republican, voting for Abraham Lincoln. When Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation (Jan. 1, 1863), Emerson counted it a momentous day for the United States; when Lincoln was killed, Emerson considered him a martyr.

Last Years

After the Civil War, Emerson continued to lecture and write. Though he had nothing really new to say anymore, audiences continued to throng his lectures and many readers bought his books. The best of the final books were Society and Solitude (1870) and Letters and Social Aims (1876). However, he was losing his memory and needed more and more help from others, especially his daughter Ellen. He was nearly 79 when he died on April 27, 1882.

America mourned Emerson's passing, as did much of the rest of the Western world. In the general judgment, he had been both a great writer and a great man. Certainly he had been America's leading essayist for half a century. And he had been not only one of the most wise but one of the most sincere of men. He had shown his countrymen the possibilities of the human spirit, and he had done so without a trace of sanctimony or pomposity. The Chicago Tribune, for instance, exclaimed, "How rare he was; how original in thought; how true in character!" Some of the eulogizing was extravagant, but in general the verdict at the time of Emerson's death has been upheld.

Further Reading

Emerson's Journals were reedited with care by William Gilman and others (7 vols., 1960-1969). Also valuable are The Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson, edited by Ralph L. Rusk (6 vols., 1939). The best biography is still Rusk's The Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1949). The best critical study of Emerson's writing is Sherman Paul, Emerson's Angle of Vision: Man and Nature in American Experience (1952), which concentrates on Emerson's principle of "correspondence." Stephen E. Whicher, Freedom and Fate (1953), is also valuable; it is called an "inner life" of Emerson and concentrates on the 1830s. The only treatment of Emerson's mind and art as they relate to the transcendentalist movement is Francis O. Matthiessen's superb American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (1941).

Philosophy Dictionary: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Emerson, Ralph Waldo (1803-82) The son of a Unitarian clergyman, Emerson was born in Boston, and educated at Harvard. Although he studied philosophy extensively, he was not a critical or systematic thinker, but rather a channel for many religious, literary, and philosophical currents of the early 19th century. Meetings with Coleridge and Wordsworth in 1833, and a continuing friendship with Carlyle, enthused Emerson with a fusion of the Protestant doctrine of self-reliance with the romantic doctrine of the primacy of personality, to both of which were added reverence for the genius and hero. To these in turn were added elements of absolute idealism, whereby the final flowering of spirit would reveal the unity of mind and nature, but Emerson also showed a pragmatist streak, emphasizing the practical effects of ideas and principles. This heady cocktail, allied with his sage's contempt for contemporary civilization, gave Emerson a huge following, addressed in a vast number of essays and lectures and through his journal The Dial, the organ of New England transcendentalism.

US History Companion: Emerson, Ralph Waldo
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(1803-1882), essayist and poet. A central figure in the history of ideas in America, Emerson attacked the sterile rationalism and materialism of his age and encouraged a new generation to find "an original relation to the universe." His romantic advocacy of self-reliance, based on a notion of the "god within," diminished the authority of institutions and traditions and empowered the self. As the central figure in the movement known as transcendentalism, he had an immediate and personal influence on Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, Bronson Alcott, and Theodore Parker, among others, and his writings on philosophical and aesthetic subjects strongly influenced the work of such major American authors as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, and Emily Dickinson.

Emerson was educated at the Boston Latin School and Harvard College and prepared for the Unitarian ministry at Harvard Divinity School. He served as minister at Boston's Second Church from 1829 to 1832, when he resigned over his refusal to administer Communion. Already a widower, in frail health, and unsure of his future, he traveled to Europe, where he met notable literary figures, including Thomas Carlyle with whom he carried on a correspondence for almost fifty years. He returned to the United States in 1833 and began his lecturing career.

In his first book, Nature (1836), a transcendentalist manifesto, Emerson distinguished between the Me (the soul or immaterial self) and the Not-Me (the external world, including nature and one's own body), arguing that the universe is so constructed as to make the Not-Me a subordinate representation of the Me. Influenced by Platonic idealism, Emerson gave primacy to the spiritual over the material, but argued that the two realms were not radically disjoined (as he felt Americans believed) but rather corresponded symbolically, point for point, as if in a kind of mirror. Emerson developed these and related ideas in various lectures, including his American Scholar address (1837) and his Divinity School address (1838), and in two volumes of Essays (1841 and 1844). At the time, his antitraditional views were regarded as both difficult to understand and, in their antinomian emphasis on self-reliance, dangerous to established institutions, especially the church. Still, his ideas and his poetic, aphoristic style attracted a devoted following among the younger generation, including the members of the Transcendental Club, and he won increasing popular respect as his lectures and books reached ever-larger audiences. In addition to collections of essays, he published Poems (1847) and May-Day (1867).

Emerson's writings bore the stamp of the Calvinist and Unitarian culture of his ancestors, present to him through much of his life in the person of his Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, who helped raise him after his father died in 1811. She instilled a love of nature in her city-bred nephew, impressed on him the value of an unceasing self-culture, and taught him to admire the poetry of John Milton and William Wordsworth. The writings of Samuel Coleridge and Carlyle led him early to an admiration of the riches of German romantic thought. Later, while editing the Dial, an important literary journal, he became interested in the "ethnical scriptures" of India and China and in the poetry of Persia. For all these many and varied influences, though, he never lost the distinctive New England texture of his early thought. His writings, including his voluminous journals, are central documents of American romanticism.

Bibliography:

Gay Wilson Allen, Waldo Emerson (1981); B. L. Packer, Emerson's Fall (1982); Stephen E. Whicher, Freedom and Fate: An Inner Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1953).

Author:

Albert J. von Frank

See also Literature; Transcendentalism.


Spotlight: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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From our Archives: Today's Highlights, May 25, 2006

Philosopher and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson was born on this date in 1803. A founder of transcendentalism, Emerson believed in the power of intuition over scientific reason and in the strength of nature and the human spirit. In one of his best-known essays, "Self Reliance," Emerson emphasizes the importance of the individual. Henry David Thoreau was one of Emerson's most celebrated disciples; he spent a great deal of time with Emerson and his wife at their home in Concord, MA.
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Emerson, Ralph Waldo (ĕm'ərsən), 1803-82, American poet and essayist, b. Boston. Through his essays, poems, and lectures, the "Sage of Concord" established himself as a leading spokesman of transcendentalism and as a major figure in American literature.

Life

The writer's father, William Emerson, a descendant of New England clergymen, was minister of the First Unitarian Church in Boston. Emerson's early years were filled with books and a daily routine of studious and frugal homelife. After his father's death in 1811, his eccentric but brilliant aunt, Mary Moody Emerson, became his confidante and stimulated his independent thinking. At Harvard (1817-21) he began recording his thoughts in the famous Journal. Poor health hindered his studies at the Harvard divinity school in 1825, and in 1826, after being licensed to preach, he was forced to go south because of incipient tuberculosis. In 1829 he became pastor of the Old North Church in Boston (Second Unitarian). In the same year he married Ellen Tucker, whose death from tuberculosis in 1831 caused him great sorrow.

Emerson's personal religious scruples and, in particular, his conviction that the Lord's Supper was not intended by Jesus to be a permanent sacrament led him into conflict with his congregation. In 1832 he retired from his only pastorate. On a trip to Europe at this time he met Carlyle (who became a close friend), Coleridge, and Wordsworth. Through these notable English writers, Emerson's interest in transcendental thought began to blossom. Other strong influences on his philosophy, besides his own Unitarian background, were Plato and the Neoplatonists, the sacred books of the East, the mystical writings of Swedenborg, and the philosophy of Kant. He returned home in 1834, settled in Concord, Mass. and married (1835) his second wife, Lydia Jackson.

Work

During the early 1830s Emerson began an active career as writer and lecturer. In 1836 he published anonymously his essay Nature, based on his early lectures. It is in that piece that he first set forth the main principles of transcendentalism, expressing a firm belief in the mystical unity of nature. He attracted wide attention with "The American Scholar," his Phi Beta Kappa oration at Harvard in 1837, in which he called for independence from European cultural leadership. In his lecture at the Harvard divinity school in 1838, his admonition that one could find redemption only in one's own soul was taken to mean that he repudiated Christianity. This caused such indignation that he was not invited to Harvard again until 1866, when the college granted him an honorary degree.

In 1840 Emerson joined with others in publishing The Dial, a magazine intended to promulgate transcendental thought. One of the younger contributors to The Dial was Henry David Thoreau, who lived in the Emerson household from 1841 to 1843 and became Emerson's most famous disciple. The first collection of Emerson's poems appeared in 1847. In spite of his difficulty in writing structurally correct verse, he always regarded himself essentially as a poet. Among his best-known poems are "Threnody," "Brahma," "The Problem," "The Rhodora," and "The Concord Hymn."

It was his winter lecture tours, however, which dominated the American lecture circuit in the 1830s and first made Emerson famous among his contemporaries. These lectures received their final form in his series of Essays (1841; second series, 1844). The most notable among them are "The Over-Soul," "Compensation," and "Self-Reliance." From 1845-47 he delivered a series of lectures published as Representative Men (1850). After a second trip to England, in 1847, he gave another series of lectures later published as English Traits (1856). During the 1850s he became strongly interested in abolitionism, and he actively supported war with the South after the attack on Fort Sumter. His late lecture tours are contained in The Conduct of Life (1860) and Society and Solitude (1870). Though his last years were marked by a decline in his mental powers, his literary reputation continued to spread. Probably no writer has so profoundly influenced American thought as Emerson.

Edward Waldo Emerson

Emerson's son, Edward Waldo Emerson, 1844-1930, was a graduate of Harvard medical school. After his father's death he devoted himself to editing and to writing about the literary men of his father's generation. He was the editor of the Centenary edition (12 vol., 1903-4) of Emerson's works, and, with W. E. Forbes, of the Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson (10 vol., 1909-14).

Bibliography

See Emerson's letters (10 vol.; vol. I-VI ed. by R. L. Rusk, 1939; vol. VII-X ed. by E. M. Tilton, 1990-95); biographies by O. W. Holmes (1885), V. W. Brooks (1932), E. Wagenknecht (1974), G. W. Allen (1981), R. D. Richardson, Jr. (1995), and L. Buell (2003); studies by J. Bishop (1964), J. Porte (1966, repr. 1979), K. W. Cameron, ed. (1967), S. E. Whicher (2d ed. 1971), C. Baker (1995), and K. S. Sacks (2003).

Works: Works by Ralph Waldo Emerson
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(1803-1882)

1832Letter... to the Second Church and Society. Emerson defends leaving his pastorship after he could not in good conscience meet his various clerical responsibilities. Emerson's reliance on his own conscience as the ultimate guide for his actions has been identified as the beginning of his career as a Transcendentalist.
1836Nature. Emerson's first major work brings together all of the basic tenets of Transcendentalism through a discussion of nature and its uses (commodity, beauty, language, discipline). It contends that expansion of the human soul is possible through a reconnection with nature and develops Emerson's idea of the "Over-Soul." Although the essay is published anonymously, many know Emerson to be the author, and it establishes him as the key figure of Transcendentalism.
1837The American Scholar. Address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard, characterizing a scholar as one with "self-trust" and calling for the leadership of American thinkers. Oliver Wendell Holmes calls the speech "our intellectual Declaration of Independence," and all five hundred printed copies of the address sell out within one month.
1838Divinity School Address. A lecture given to the senior students at Harvard Divinity School that became Emerson's most controversial proclamation. In it, Emerson criticizes traditional Christianity as empty and calls for a revitalization of spirit. He urges the new ministers to speak the truth of their own experience because they, like Jesus Christ, are capable of the Divine. Printed as an essay later that year and collected in Nature, Addresses, and Lectures (1849), the address wins favor from William Ellery Channing and Theodore Parker but is disdained by Andrews Norton, who would assail it in On the Latest Form of Infidelity (1839).
1839"Each and All." Emerson's poem calls Nature "the perfect whole." He also publishes "The Humble-Bee," in praise of the "yellow-breeched philosopher" who sips "only what is sweet," and "The Rhodora," with the lines "if eyes were made for seeing / Then Beauty is its own excuse for being."
1841"The Method of Nature." Emerson's address is his fullest treatment of his theory of natural development and organic growth, which he applies to society and literature. Also in this year Emerson publishes Essays, the first of two collections of essays originally presented as lectures. The twelve compositions study the concepts of friendship, heroism, intellect, and art. The most celebrated is "Self-Reliance," in which the author extols the primacy of the individual.
1841"The Sphinx." First published in the Dial and to be included in Poems (1847), the poem is paraphrased in Emerson's journal as expressing the concept that "if the mind lives only in particulars... then the world addresses to the mind a question it cannot answer."
1844Essays, Second Series. A collection of essays, more popular than the first, formed from lectures based on Emerson's journals. In it the author investigates experience, manners, politics, and character. In the essay "The Poet," Emerson calls for a literary artist through whom the wonder of America can resonate. The series of essays helps raise the author's status in the United States and Europe.
1847Poems. Emerson's first collection of verse is harshly criticized in some reviews, including one in the North American Review, which calls it "the most prosaic and unintelligible stuff." Other critics admire the poems' unique and understated style, and the volume earns the author a modest profit with a sale of 850 copies in one year. Revised and enlarged numerous times, the collection would be issued in 1904 in an edition celebrating the centenary of Emerson's birth. Emerson also publishes "Ode Inscribed to W. H. Channing," a response to the request by William Henry Channing [II] for Emerson's views on slavery. It includes one of his most famous lines: "Things are in the saddle, / And ride mankind."
1850Representative Men. A collection of biographical sketches of Shakespeare, Plato, Goethe, Swedenborg, Napoleon, and Montaigne, which Emerson had delivered from 1845 to 1848. The introductory essay, "On the Uses of Great Men," explains his belief that these men represent their times and countries and illustrate the individual's ability to effect change regardless of environment.
1856English Traits. A book of lectures exploring the nature of the English. Emerson investigates the qualities that he asserts mark the English as paragons of excellence, while also objectively illustrating their imperfections. The result of Emerson's stay in England, the book lauds British men, including writers such as Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Carlyle.
1860The Conduct of Life. This collection of lectures first delivered between 1851 and 1852 reiterates Emerson's beliefs about fate, power, wealth, and worship, among other topics. The lectures reveal the author's optimism and modification of his Transcendentalist philosophy in the direction of pragmatism. Included are some of his best-known epigrams, such as "Shallow men believe in luck" and "One of the benefits of a college education is to show the boy its little avail."
1863"Voluntaries." An elegy commemorating Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, commander of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment--the first black regiment--killed in the battle for Fort Wagner. Emerson justifies Shaw's death not for the preservation of the Union but for the abolition of slavery.
1870Society and Solitude. A collection of essays based on Emerson's lectures delivered since 1858. In the title essay, the philosopher argues for a balance between social and solitary ways of living. Other essays include "Civilization," "Art," "Books," and "Old Age."
1876Letters and Social Aims. Emerson's collection contains the long essay "Poetry and the Imagination," his last major restatement and reaffirmation of his symbolizing conception of the literary process, arguing that "A good symbol is the best argument" and that poetry "is the only verity.... As a power, it is the perception of the symbolic character of things, and the treating of them as representative."
1878Fortune of the Republic: Lecture Delivered at the Old South Church. The publication of Emerson's lecture originally delivered in 1862 to boost morale and support the Northern cause.
1893Natural History of the Intellect and Other Papers. This posthumous collection of lectures includes "Thoughts on Modern Literature," first published in 1840, in which Emerson identifies three classes of literature: "the highest... are those which express the moral element, the next, works of imagination, and the next, works of science."

Quotes By: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Quotes:

"Nature is full of freaks, and now puts an old head on young shoulders, and then takes a young heart heating under fourscore winters."

"We do not count a man's years until he has nothing else to count."

"Can anything be so elegant as to have few wants, and to serve them one's self?"

"There is nothing capricious in nature and the implanting of a desire indicates that its gratification is in the constitution of the creature that feel it."

"A man is a god in ruins."

"Most of the shadows of this life are caused by standing in one's own sunshine"

See more famous quotes by Ralph Waldo Emerson

Wikipedia: Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson
Full name Ralph Waldo Emerson
Born May 25, 1803(1803-05-25)
Boston, Massachusetts
Died April 27, 1882 (aged 78)
Concord, Massachusetts
Era 19th century philosophy
Region Western Philosophy
School Transcendentalism
Signature Appletons' Emerson Ralph Waldo signature.jpg

Ralph Waldo Emerson (May 25, 1803 – April 27, 1882) was an American essayist, philosopher, and poet, best remembered for leading the Transcendentalist movement of the mid 19th century. His teachings directly influenced the growing New Thought movement of the mid 1800s.[1] He was seen as a champion of individualism and a prescient critic of the countervailing pressures of society.

Emerson gradually moved away from the religious and social beliefs of his contemporaries, formulating and expressing the philosophy of Transcendentalism in his 1836 essay, Nature. As a result of this ground breaking work he gave a speech entitled The American Scholar in 1837, which Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. considered to be America's "Intellectual Declaration of Independence".[2] Considered one of the great orators of the time, Emerson's enthusiasm and respect for his audience enraptured crowds. His support for abolitionism late in life created controversy, and at times he was subject to abuse from crowds while speaking on the topic. When asked to sum up his work, he said his central doctrine was "the infinitude of the private man."[3]

Contents

Biography

Early life, family, and education

Emerson was born in Boston, Massachusetts on May 25, 1803,[4] son of Ruth Haskins and the Rev. William Emerson, a Unitarian minister who descended from a well-known line of ministers.[5] He was named after his mother's brother Ralph and the father's great-grandmother Rebecca Waldo.[6] Ralph Waldo was the second of five sons who survived into adulthood; the others were William, Edward, Robert Bulkeley, and Charles.[7] Three other children—Phebe, John Clarke, and Mary Caroline—all died in childhood.[7]

The young Ralph Waldo Emerson's father died from stomach cancer on May 12, 1811, less than two weeks before Emerson's eighth birthday.[8] Emerson was raised by his mother as well as other intellectual and spiritual women in his family, including his aunt Mary Moody Emerson, who had a profound impact on the young Emerson.[9] She lived with the family off and on and maintained a constant correspondence with Emerson until her death in 1863.[10]

Emerson's formal schooling began at the Boston Latin School in 1812 when he was nine.[11] In October 1817, at 14, Emerson went to Harvard College and was appointed freshman messenger for the president, requiring Emerson to fetch delinquent students and send messages to faculty.[12] Midway through his junior year, Emerson began keeping a list of books he had read and started a journal in a series of notebooks that would be called "Wide World".[13] He took outside jobs to cover his school expenses, including as a waiter for the Junior Commons and as an occasional teacher working with his uncle Samuel in Waltham, Massachusetts.[14] By his senior year, Emerson decided to go by his middle name, Waldo.[15] Emerson served as Class Poet and, as was custom, presented an original poem on Harvard's Class Day, a month before his official graduation on August 29, 1821, when he was 18.[16] He did not stand out as a student and graduated in the exact middle of his class of 59 people.[17]

Around 1826, during a winter trip to St. Augustine, Florida, Emerson made the acquaintance of Prince Achille Murat. Murat, the nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte, was only two years his senior and the two became extremely good friends and enjoyed one another's company. The two engaged in enlightening discussions on religion, society, philosophy, and government.[18]

Early career

Engraved drawing, 1878

After Harvard, Emerson assisted his brother in a school for young ladies[19] established in their mother's house, after he had established his own school in Chelmsford, Massachusetts; when his brother went to Göttingen to study divinity, Emerson took charge of the school. Over the next several years, Emerson made his living as a schoolmaster, then went to Harvard Divinity School. In May 1828, Emerson's younger brother William, who had been working with lawyer Daniel Webster, had to be sent to McLean Asylum.[20]

Boston's Second Church invited Emerson to serve as its junior pastor and he was ordained on March 11, 1829.[21] Emerson met his first wife, Ellen Louisa Tucker, in Concord, New Hampshire and married her when she was 18.[22] The couple moved to Boston, with Emerson's mother Ruth moving with them to help take care of Ellen, who was already sick with tuberculosis.[23] Less than two years later, Ellen died at the age of 20 on February 8, 1831, after uttering her last words: "I have not forgot the peace and joy".[24] Emerson was heavily affected by her death and often visited her grave.[25] In a journal entry dated March 29, 1831, Emerson wrote, "I visited Ellen's tomb and opened the coffin".[26] After his wife's death, he began to disagree with the church's methods, writing in his journal in June 1832: "I have sometimes thought that, in order to be a good minister, it was necessary to leave the ministry. The profession is antiquated. In an altered age, we worship in the dead forms of our forefathers".[27] His disagreements with church officials over the administration of the Communion service and misgivings about public prayer eventually led to his resignation in 1832. As he wrote, "This mode of commemorating Christ is not suitable to me. That is reason enough why I should abandon it".[28]

Emerson toured Europe in 1832 and later wrote of his travels in English Traits (1857).[29] He left aboard the brig Jasper on Christmas Day, sailing first to Malta.[30] During his European trip, he met William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Stuart Mill, and Thomas Carlyle. Carlyle in particular was a strong influence on Emerson; Emerson would later serve as an unofficial literary agent in the United States for Carlyle. The two would maintain correspondence until Carlyle's death in 1881.[31]

Emerson returned to the United States on October 9, 1833, and lived with his mother in Newton, Massachusetts until November 1834, when he moved to Concord, Massachusetts to live with his step-grandfather Dr. Ezra Ripley at what was later named The Old Manse.[32] In 1835, he bought a house on the Cambridge and Concord Turnpike in Concord, Massachusetts, now open to the public as the Ralph Waldo Emerson House,[33] and quickly became one of the leading citizens in the town. He married his second wife Lydia Jackson in her home town of Plymouth, Massachusetts[34] on September 14, 1835.[35] He called her Lidian and she called him Mr. Emerson.[36] Their children were Waldo, Ellen, Edith, and Edward Waldo Emerson. Ellen was named for his first wife, at Lidian's suggestion.[37]

Emerson lived a financially conservative lifestyle.[38] He had inherited some wealth after his wife's death, though he brought a lawsuit against the Tucker family in 1836 to get it.[39] He received $11,674.79 in July 1837.[40]

Literary career and Transcendentalism

Ralph Waldo Emerson in 1859

Emerson and other like-minded intellectuals founded the Transcendental Club, which served as a center for the movement. Its first official meeting was held on September 19, 1836.[41] Emerson anonymously published his first essay, Nature, in September 1836. A year later, on August 31, 1837, Emerson delivered his now-famous Phi Beta Kappa address, "The American Scholar",[42] then known as "An Oration, Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge"; it was renamed for a collection of essays in 1849.[43] In the speech, Emerson declared literary independence in the United States and urged Americans to create a writing style all their own and free from Europe.[44] James Russell Lowell, who was a student at Harvard at the time, called it "an event without former parallel on our literary annals".[45] Another member of the audience, Reverend John Pierce, called it "an apparently incoherent and unintelligible address".[46]

In 1837, Emerson befriended Henry David Thoreau. Though they had likely met as early as 1835, in the fall of 1837, Emerson asked Thoreau, "Do you keep a journal?" The question went on to have a lifelong inspiration for Thoreau.[47]

On July 15, 1838,[48] Emerson was invited to Divinity Hall, Harvard Divinity School for the school's graduation address, which came to be known as his "Divinity School Address". Emerson discounted Biblical miracles and proclaimed that, while Jesus was a great man, he was not God: historical Christianity, he said, had turned Jesus into a "demigod, as the Orientals or the Greeks would describe Osiris or Apollo".[49] His comments outraged the establishment and the general Protestant community. For this, he was denounced as an atheist,[49] and a poisoner of young men's minds. Despite the roar of critics, he made no reply, leaving others to put forward a defense. He was not invited back to speak at Harvard for another thirty years.[50]

The Transcendental group began to publish its flagship journal, The Dial, in July 1840.[51] They planned the journal as early as October 1839, but work did not begin until the first week of 1840.[52] George Ripley was its managing editor[53] and Margaret Fuller was its first editor, having been hand-chosen by Emerson after several others had declined the role.[54] Fuller stayed on for about two years and Emerson took over, utilizing the journal to promote talented young writers including William Ellery Channing and Thoreau.[47]

In January 1842, Emerson's first son Waldo died from scarlet fever.[55] Emerson wrote of his grief in the poem "Threnody" ("For this losing is true dying"),[56] and the essay "Experience". In the same year, William James was born, and Emerson agreed to be his godfather.

It was in 1842 that Emerson published Essays, his second book, which included the famous essay, "Self-Reliance." His aunt called it a "strange medley of atheism and false independence," but it gained favorable reviews in London and Paris. This book, and its popular reception, more than any of Emerson's contributions to date laid the groundwork for his international fame.[57]

Bronson Alcott announced his plans in November 1842 to find "a farm of a hundred acres in excellent condition with good buildings, a good orchard and grounds".[58] Charles Lane purchased a 90-acre (360,000 m2) farm in Harvard, Massachusetts in May 1843 for what would become Fruitlands, a community based on Utopian ideals inspired in part by Transcendentalism.[59] The farm would run based on a communal effort, using no animals for labor, and its participants would eat no meat and use no wool or leather.[60] Emerson said he felt "sad at heart" for not engaging in the experiment himself.[61] Even so, he did not feel Fruitlands would be a success. "Their whole doctrine is spiritual", he wrote, "but they always end with saying, Give us much land and money".[62] Even Alcott admitted he was not prepared for the difficulty in operating Fruitlands. "None of us were prepared to actualize practically the ideal life of which we dreamed. So we fell apart", he wrote.[63] After its failure, Emerson helped buy a farm for Alcott's family in Concord[62] which Alcott named "Hillside".[63]

The Dial ceased publication in April 1844; Horace Greeley reported it as an end to the "most original and thoughtful periodical ever published in this country".[64]

Emerson made a living as a popular lecturer in New England and much of the rest of the country. From 1847 to 1848, he toured England, Scotland, and Ireland.[65] He also visited Paris between the February Revolution and the bloody June Days. When he arrived, he saw the stumps where trees had been cut down to form barricades in the February riots. On May 21 he stood on the Champ de Mars in the midst of mass celebrations for concord, peace and labor. He wrote in his journal: "At the end of the year we shall take account, & see if the Revolution was worth the trees."[66] He had begun lecturing in 1833; by the 1850s he was giving as many as 80 per year.[67] Emerson spoke on a wide variety of subjects and many of his essays grew out of his lectures. He charged between $10 and $50 for each appearance, bringing him about $800 to $1,000 per year.[68] His earnings allowed him to expand his property, buying eleven acres of land by Walden Pond and a few more acres in a neighboring pine grove. He wrote that he was "landlord and waterlord of 14 acres, more or less".[62]

In 1845, Emerson's journals show he was reading the Bhagavad Gita and Henry Thomas Colebrooke's Essays on the Vedas.[69] Emerson was strongly influenced by the Vedas, and much of his writing has strong shades of nondualism. One of the clearest examples of this can be found in his essay "The Over-soul":

We live in succession, in division, in parts, in particles. Meantime within man is the soul of the whole; the wise silence; the universal beauty, to which every part and particle is equally related, the eternal ONE. And this deep power in which we exist and whose beatitude is all accessible to us, is not only self-sufficing and perfect in every hour, but the act of seeing and the thing seen, the seer and the spectacle, the subject and the object, are one. We see the world piece by piece, as the sun, the moon, the animal, the tree; but the whole, of which these are shining parts, is the soul.[70]

Emerson was introduced to Indian philosophy when reading the works of French philosopher Victor Cousin.[71]

In February 1852, Emerson and James Freeman Clarke and William Henry Channing edited an edition of the works and letters of Margaret Fuller, who had died in 1850.[72] Within a week of her death, her New York editor Horace Greeley suggested to Emerson that a biography of Fuller, to be called Margaret and Her Friends, be prepared quickly "before the interest excited by her sad decease has passed away".[73] Published with the title The Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli,[74] Fuller's words were heavily censored or rewritten.[75] The three editors were not concerned about accuracy; they believed public interest in Fuller was temporary and that she would not survive as a historical figure.[76] Even so, for a time, it was the best-selling biography of the decade and went through thirteen editions before the end of the century.[74]

Walt Whitman published the innovative poetry collection Leaves of Grass in 1855 and sent a copy to Emerson for his opinion. Emerson responded positively, sending a flattering five-page letter as a response.[77] Emerson's approval helped the first edition of Leaves of Grass stir up significant interest[78] and convinced Whitman to issue a second edition shortly thereafter.[79] This edition quoted a phrase from Emerson's letter, printed in gold leaf on the cover: "I Greet You at the Beginning of a Great Career".[80] Emerson took offense that this letter was made public[81] and later became more critical of the work.[82]

Civil War years

Though Emerson was anti-slavery, he did not immediately become active in the abolitionist movement. He voted for Abraham Lincoln in 1860, but Emerson was disappointed that Lincoln was more concerned about preserving the Union than eliminating slavery outright.[83] Once the American Civil War broke out, Emerson made it clear that he believed in immediate emancipation of the slaves.[84] Emerson gave a public lecture in Washington, D.C. on January 31, 1862, and declared: "The South calls slavery an institution... I call it destitution... Emancipation is the demand of civilization".[85] The next day, February 1, his friend Charles Sumner took him to meet Lincoln at the White House; his misgivings about Lincoln began to soften after this meeting.[86]

On May 6, 1862, Emerson's protege Henry David Thoreau died of tuberculosis at the age of 44 and Emerson delivered his eulogy. Emerson would continuously refer to Thoreau as his best friend,[87] despite a falling out that began in 1849 after Thoreau published A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers.[88] Another friend, Nathaniel Hawthorne, died two years after Thoreau in 1864. Emerson served as one of the pallbearers as Hawthorne was buried in Concord, as Emerson wrote, "in a pomp of sunshine and verdure".[89]

Final years and death

Emerson's grave in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery

Beginning as early as the summer of 1871 or in the spring of 1872, Emerson was losing his memory[90] and suffered from aphasia.[91] By the end of the decade, he forgot his own name at times and, when anyone asked how he felt, he responded, "Quite well; I have lost my mental faculties, but am perfectly well".[92]

Emerson's Concord home caught fire on July 24, 1872; Emerson called for help from neighbors and, giving up on putting out the flames, all attempted to save as many objects as possible.[93] The fire was put out by Ephraim Bull, Jr., the one-armed son of Ephraim Wales Bull.[94] Donations were collected by friends to help the Emersons rebuild, including $5,000 gathered by Francis Cabot Lowell, another $10,000 collected by LeBaron Russell Briggs, and a personal donation of $1,000 from George Bancroft.[95] Support for shelter was offered as well; though the Emersons ended up staying with family at the Old Manse, invitations came from Anne Lynch Botta, James Elliot Cabot, James Thomas Fields and Annie Adams Fields.[96] The fire marked an end to Emerson's serious lecturing career; from then on, he would lecture only on special occasions and only in front of familiar audiences.[97]

While the house was being rebuilt, Emerson took a trip to England, the main European continent, and Egypt. He left on October 23, 1872, along with his daughter Ellen[98] while his wife Lidian spent time at the Old Manse and with friends.[99] Emerson and his daughter Ellen returned to the United States on the ship Olympus along with friend Charles Eliot Norton on April 15, 1873.[100] Emerson's return to Concord was celebrated by the town and school was canceled that day.[91]

In late 1874, Emerson published an anthology of poetry called Parnassus, which included poems by Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Julia Caroline Dorr, Jean Ingelow, Lucy Larcom, Jones Very, as well as Thoreau and several others.[101] The anthology was originally prepared as early as the fall of 1871 but was delayed when the publishers asked for revisions.[102]

The problems with his memory had become embarrassing to Emerson and he ceased his public appearances by 1879. As Holmes wrote, "Emerson is afraid to trust himself in society much, on account of the failure of his memory and the great difficulty he finds in getting the words he wants. It is painful to witness his embarrassment at times".[92]

On April 19, 1882, Emerson went walking despite having an apparent cold and was caught in a sudden rain shower. Two days later, he was diagnosed with pneumonia.[103] He died on April 27, 1882. Emerson is buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Massachusetts.[104] He was placed in his coffin wearing a white robe given by American sculptor Daniel Chester French.[105]

Lifestyle and beliefs

Ralph Waldo Emerson in later years

Emerson's religious views were often considered radical at the time. He believed that all things are connected to God and, therefore, all things are divine.[106] Critics believed that Emerson was removing the central God figure; as Henry Ware, Jr. said, Emerson was in danger of taking away "the Father of the Universe" and leaving "but a company of children in an orphan asylum".[107] Emerson was partly influenced by German philosophy and Biblical criticism.[108] His views, the basis of Transcendentalism, suggested that God does not have to reveal the truth but that the truth could be intuitively experienced directly from nature.[109]

Emerson did not become an ardent abolitionist until later in his life, though his journals show he was concerned with slavery beginning in his youth. When he was young, he even dreamed about helping to free slaves, though he was not a strong public abolitionist voice at the time. In June 1856, shortly after Charles Sumner, a United States Senator, was beaten for his staunch abolitionist views, Emerson lamented that he himself was not as committed to the cause. He wrote, "There are men who as soon as they are born take a bee-line to the axe of the inquisitor... Wonderful the way in which we are saved by this unfailing supply of the moral element".[110] After Sumner's attack, Emerson began to speak out about slavery. "I think we must get rid of slavery, or we must get rid of freedom", he said at a meeting at Concord that summer.[111] Emerson used slavery as an example of a human injustice, especially in his role as a minister. In early 1838, provoked by the murder of an abolitionist publisher from Alton, Illinois named Elijah Parish Lovejoy, Emerson gave his first public antislavery address. As he said, "It is but the other day that the brave Lovejoy gave his breast to the bullets of a mob, for the rights of free speech and opinion, and died when it was better not to live".[110] John Quincy Adams said the mob-murder of Lovejoy "sent a shock as of any earthquake throughout this continent".[112] However, Emerson maintained that reform would be achieved through moral agreement rather than by militant action. By August 1, 1844, at a lecture in Concord, he stated more clearly his support for the abolitionist movement. He stated, "We are indebted mainly to this movement, and to the continuers of it, for the popular discussion of every point of practical ethics".[113]

There is evidence suggesting that Emerson may have been bisexual.[114] During his early years at Harvard, he found himself "strangely attracted" to a young freshman named Martin Gay about whom he wrote sexually charged poetry.[115][116] Gay would be only the first of his infatuations and interests, with Nathaniel Hawthorne numbered among them.[117]

Legacy

As a lecturer and orator, Emerson—nicknamed the Concord Sage—became the leading voice of intellectual culture in the United States.[118] Herman Melville, who had met Emerson in 1849, originally thought he had "a defect in the region of the heart" and a "self-conceit so intensely intellectual that at first one hesitates to call it by its right name", though he later admitted Emerson was "a great man".[119] Theodore Parker, a minister and Transcendentalist, noted Emerson's ability to influence and inspire others: "the brilliant genius of Emerson rose in the winter nights, and hung over Boston, drawing the eyes of ingenuous young people to look up to that great new start, a beauty and a mystery, which charmed for the moment, while it gave also perennial inspiration, as it led them forward along new paths, and towards new hopes".[120]

In his book The American Religion, Harold Bloom repeatedly refers to Emerson as "The prophet of the American Religion," which in the context of the book refers to indigenously American and gnostic-tinged religions such as Mormonism and Christian Science that arose largely in Emerson's lifetime. In The Western Canon, Harold Bloom compares Emerson to Michel de Montaigne: "The only equivalent reading experience that I know is to reread endlessly in the notebooks and journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson, the American version of Montaigne."[121]

In May 2006, 168 years after Emerson delivered his "Divinity School Address," Harvard Divinity School announced the establishment of the Emerson Unitarian Universalist Association Professorship.[122] Harvard has also named a building, Emerson Hall (1900), after him.[123]

Emerson Hill, a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Staten Island is named for his eldest brother, Judge William Emerson, who resided there from 1837 to 1864.[124]

Selected works

Representative Men (1850)

Collections

  • Poems (1847)
  • Representative Men (1850)
  • English Traits (1856)
  • The Conduct of Life (1860)
  • May Day and Other Poems (1867)
  • Society and Solitude (1870)
  • Letters and Social Aims (1876)

Essays

Poems

See also

Notes

  1. ^ New Thought at MSN Encarta. Retrieved Nov. 16, 2007.
  2. ^ Cheever, 80
  3. ^ Ward, p. 389.
  4. ^ Sullivan, 3.
  5. ^ Cheever, 76.
  6. ^ McAleer, 12.
  7. ^ a b Baker, 3
  8. ^ McAleer, 40
  9. ^ Richardson, 22–23
  10. ^ Baker, 35
  11. ^ McAleer, 44
  12. ^ McAleer, 52
  13. ^ Richardson, 11
  14. ^ McAleer, 53
  15. ^ Richardson, 6
  16. ^ McAleer, 61
  17. ^ Buell, 13
  18. ^ Field, Peter S., Ralph Waldo Emerson: The Making of a Democratic Intellectual, Rowman & Littlefield, 2003, ISBN 0847688437, 9780847688432
  19. ^ McAleer, 66
  20. ^ Baker, 5
  21. ^ Packer, 36–37
  22. ^ Cheever, 78
  23. ^ McAleer, 105
  24. ^ Richardson, 108
  25. ^ Cheever, 79
  26. ^ Baker, 11
  27. ^ Sullivan, 6
  28. ^ Packer, 39
  29. ^ McAleer, 132
  30. ^ Baker, 23
  31. ^ Packer, 40.
  32. ^ Sullivan, 8
  33. ^ Wilson, Susan. Literary Trail of Greater Boston. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000: 127. ISBN 0-618-05013-2
  34. ^ Lydia (Jackson) Emerson was a descendant of Abraham Jackson, one of the original proprietors of Plymouth, who married the daughter of Nathaniel Morton, longtime Secretary of the Plymouth Colony.
  35. ^ Sullivan, 9
  36. ^ Richardson, 192
  37. ^ Baker, 86
  38. ^ Cheever, 86
  39. ^ Cheever, 82
  40. ^ McAleer, 108
  41. ^ Baker, 53
  42. ^ Sullivan, 13
  43. ^ Buell, 45
  44. ^ Watson, Peter. Ideas: A History of Thought and Invention, from Fire to Freud. New York: Harper Perennial, 2005: 688. ISBN 978-0-06-093564-1
  45. ^ Mowat, R. B. The Victorian Age. London: Senate, 1995: 83. ISBN 1-85958-161-8
  46. ^ Menand, Louis. The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001: 18. ISBN 0-374-19963-9
  47. ^ a b Buell, 121
  48. ^ Packer, 73
  49. ^ a b Buell, 161
  50. ^ Sullivan, 14
  51. ^ Gura, 129
  52. ^ Von Mehren, 120
  53. ^ Slater, Abby. In Search of Margaret Fuller. New York: Delacorte Press, 1978: 61–62. ISBN 0-440-03944-4
  54. ^ Gura, 128–129
  55. ^ Cheever, 93
  56. ^ McAleer, 313
  57. ^ The Bedside Baccalaureate, David Rubel, ed. (Sterling 2008), p. 153.
  58. ^ Baker, 218
  59. ^ Packer, 148
  60. ^ Richardson, 381
  61. ^ Baker, 219
  62. ^ a b c Packer, 150
  63. ^ a b Baker, 221
  64. ^ Gura, 130
  65. ^ Buell, 31
  66. ^ Allen, Gay Wilson. Waldo Emerson. New York: Penguin Books, 1982: 512–514.
  67. ^ Richardson, 418
  68. ^ Sullivan, 16
  69. ^ Sachin N. Pradhan, India in the United States: Contribution of India and Indians in the United States of America, Bethesda, MD: SP Press International, Inc., 1996, p 12.
  70. ^ The Over-Soul from Essays: First Series (1841)
  71. ^ Richardson, 114
  72. ^ Baker, 321
  73. ^ Von Mehren, 340
  74. ^ a b Von Mehren, 343
  75. ^ Blanchard, Paula. Margaret Fuller: From Transcendentalism to Revolution. Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1987: 339. ISBN 0-201-10458-X
  76. ^ Von Mehren, 342
  77. ^ Kaplan, 203
  78. ^ Callow, Philip. From Noon to Starry Night: A Life of Walt Whitman. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1992: 232. ISBN 0929587952
  79. ^ Miller, James E., Jr. Walt Whitman. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc. 1962: 27.
  80. ^ Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Vintage Books, 1995: 352. ISBN 0679767096.
  81. ^ Callow, Philip. From Noon to Starry Night: A Life of Walt Whitman. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1992: 236. ISBN 0929587952.
  82. ^ Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Vintage Books, 1995: 343. ISBN 0679767096.
  83. ^ McAleer, 569–570
  84. ^ Richardson, 547
  85. ^ Baker, 433
  86. ^ McAleer, 570
  87. ^ Richardson, 548
  88. ^ Packer, 193
  89. ^ Baker, 448
  90. ^ Baker, 502
  91. ^ a b Richardson, 569
  92. ^ a b McAleer, 629
  93. ^ Richardson, 566
  94. ^ Baker, 504
  95. ^ Baker, 506
  96. ^ McAleer, 613
  97. ^ Richardson, 567
  98. ^ Richardson, 568
  99. ^ Baker, 507
  100. ^ McAleer, 618
  101. ^ Richardson, 570
  102. ^ Baker, 497
  103. ^ Richardson, 572
  104. ^ Sullivan, 25
  105. ^ McAleer, 662
  106. ^ Richardson, 538
  107. ^ Buell, 165
  108. ^ Packer, 23
  109. ^ Hankins, Barry. The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2004: 136. ISBN 0-313-31848-4
  110. ^ a b McAleer, 531
  111. ^ Packer, 232
  112. ^ Richardson, 269
  113. ^ Lowance, Mason (2000). Against Slavery: An Abolitionist Reader. Penguin Classics. pp. 301–302. ISBN 0140437584. 
  114. ^ Shand-Tucci, Douglas (2003). The Crimson Letter. New York: St Martens Press. pp. 15–16. ISBN 0-312-19896-5. 
  115. ^ Kaplan, 248
  116. ^ Richardson, 9
  117. ^ Kaplan, 249
  118. ^ Buell, 34
  119. ^ Sullivan, 123
  120. ^ Baker, 201
  121. ^ Bloom, Harold. The Western Canon. London: Papermac. 147–148.
  122. ^ Harvard Divinity School (May 2006). "Emerson Unitarian Universalist Association Professorship Established at Harvard Divinity School". Press release. http://www.hds.harvard.edu/news/pr/emerson_uu.html. Retrieved 2007-02-22. 
  123. ^ Department of Philosophy of Harvard University
  124. ^ http://www.nypl.org/branch/staten/index2.cfm?Trg=1&d1=1391 Staten Island on the Web: Famous Staten Islanders

Sources

  • Baker, Carlos (1996). Emerson Among the Eccentrics: A Group Portrait. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-86675-X. 
  • Buell, Lawrence (2003). Emerson. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN ISBN 0-674-01139-2. 
  • Cheever, Susan (2006). American Bloomsbury: Louisa May Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry David Thoreau; Their Lives, Their Loves, Their Work. Detroit: Thorndike Press. ISBN 078629521X. 
  • Gura, Philip F (2007). American Transcendentalism: A History. New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 978-0-8090-3477-2. 
  • Kaplan, Justin (1979). Walt Whitman: A Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0671225421. 
  • McAleer, John (1984). Ralph Waldo Emerson: Days of Encounter. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0316553417. 
  • Packer, Barbara L. (2007). The Transcendentalists. The University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820329581. 
  • Richardson, Robert D., Jr. (1995). Emerson: The Mind on Fire. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-08808-5. 
  • Sullivan, Wilson (1972). New England Men of Letters. New York: The Macmillan Company. ISBN 0027886808. 
  • Von Mehren, Joan (1994). Minerva and the Muse: A Life of Margaret Fuller. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 1-55849-015-9. 
  • Ward, Julius H. (1887). The Andover Review. Houghton Mifflin. 

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From Today's Highlights
February 26, 2005

Over the winter glaciers, I see the summer glow, And, through the wild-piled snowdrift, The warm rosebuds below.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson, in "The World-Soul"

See more quotes