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Ralph Waldo Emerson
Transcendentalist Author, 1802-1882
"To
classify Emerson is a matter of no small difficulty. He was a philosopher,
he was an essayist, he was a poet-all three so eminently that scarcely two
of his friends would agree to which class he most belonged. Oliver Wendell
Holmes asked:
Where in the realm of thought whose air is song
Does he the Buddha of the west belong?
He seems a winged Franklin sweetly wise,
Born to unlock the secret of the skies.
But whatever he did was done with a poetic touch. Philosophy, essay or song,
it was all pregnant with the spirit of poetry. Whatever else he was Emerson
was pre-eminently a poet. It was with this golden key that he unlocked the
chambers of original thought, that liberated American letters.
Until Emerson
came, American authors had little independence. James Russell Lowell
declared, 'We were socially and intellectually bound to English thought,
until Emerson cut the cable and gave us a chance at the dangers and glories
of blue waters. He was our first optimistic writer. Before his day, Puritan
theology had seen in man only a vile nature and considered his instincts for
beauty and pleasure, proofs of his total depravity.'
Under such
conditions as these, the imagination was fettered and wholesome literature
was impossible. As a reaction against this Puritan austerity came
Unitarianism, which aimed to establish the dignity of man, and out of this
came the further growth of the idealism or transcendentalism of Emerson. It
was this idea and these aspirations of the new theology that Emerson
converted into literature. The indirect influence of his example on the
writings of Longfellow,
Holmes,
Whittier and.
Lowell, and its direct influence on
Thoreau, Hawthorne, Chas. A. Dana, Margaret Fuller, G. W. Curtis and others,
formed the very foundation for the beautiful structure of our representative
American literature.
Emerson was
profoundly a thinker who pondered the relation of man to God and to the
universe. He conceived and taught the noblest ideals of virtue and a
spiritual life. The profound study which Emerson devoted to his themes and
his philosophic cast of mind made him a writer for scholars. He was a
prophet who, without argument, announced truths which, by intuition, he
seems to have perceived; but the thought is often so shadowy that the
ordinary reader fails to catch it. For this reason he will never be like
Longfellow or Whittier, a favorite with the masses. Let it not be
understood, however, that all of Emerson's writings are heavy or shadowy or
difficult to understand.
On the contrary,
some of his poems are of a popular character and are easy of comprehension.
For instance, The Hymn, sung at the completion of the Concord
Monument in 1836, was on everyone's lips at the time of the Centennial
celebration, in 1876. His optimistic spirit is also beautifully and clearly
expressed in the following stanza of his Voluntaries:
So nigh is
grandeur to our dust,
So near is God to man,
When duty whispers low, 'Thou must,'
The youth replies, 'I can.'
These are but
two instances of many that may be cited. No author is, perhaps, more enjoyed
by those who understand him. He was a master of language. He never used the
wrong word. His sentences are models. But he was not a logical
or methodical
writer. Every sentence stands by itself.
His
paragraphs might be
arranged almost
at random without essential loss to the essays. His philosophy consists
largely in an array of golden sayings full of vital suggestions to help men
make the best and most of themselves. He had no compact system of
philosophy.
Ralph Waldo
Emerson was born in Boston, May 25,1803, within 'A kite-string of the birth
place of Benjamin Franklin' with whom he [was] frequently compared. The
likeness, however, consists only in the fact that they were both decidedly
representative Americans of a decidedly different type. Franklin was prose,
Emerson poetry; Franklin common sense, real; Emerson imaginative, ideal. In
these opposite respects they both were equally representative of the highest
type. Both were hopeful, kindly and shrewd. Both equally powerful in making,
training and guiding the American people
In his eighth
year young Emerson was sent to a grammar school, where he made such rapid
progress, that he was soon able to enter a higher department known as a
Latin school. His first attempts at writing were not the dull efforts of a
school boy; but original poems which he read with real taste and feeling. He
completed his course and graduated from Harvard College at eighteen. It is
said that he was dull in mathematics and not above the average in his class
in general standing; but he was widely read in literature, which put him far
in advance, perhaps, of any young man of his age.
After
graduating, he taught school for five years in connection with his brother;
but in 1825, gave it up for the ministry. For a time he was pastor of a
Unitarian Congregation in Boston; but his independent views were not in
accordance with the doctrine of his church, therefore, he resigned in 1835,
and retired to Concord, where he purchased a home near the spot on which the
first battle of the Revolution was fought in 1775, which he commemorated in
his own verse:
There first
the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard round the world.
In this city,
Emerson resided until the day of his death, which occurred in Concord, April
27, 1882, in the seventy-eighth year of his age.
It was in
Concord that the poet and essayist, as the prophet of the advanced thought
of his age, gathered around him those leading spirits who were dissatisfied
with the selfishness and shallowness of existing society, and, who had been
led by him to dream of all ideal condition in which all should live as one
family. Out of this grew the famous Brook Farm Community. This was
not an original idea of Emerson's, however. Coleridge and Southey, of
England, had thought of founding such a society in Pennsylvania, on the
Susquehanna River. Emerson regarded this community of interests as the clear
teachings of Jesus Christ; and, to put into practical operation this idea, a
farm of about two hundred acres was bought at Roxbury, Mass., and a stock
company was formed under the title of The Brook Farm Institution of
Agriculture and Education. About seventy members joined
in the
enterprise.
The principle of
the organization was cooperative, the members sharing the profits. Nathaniel
Hawthorne, the greatest of romancers, Chas. A. Dana, of the New York Sun,
George W. Curtis, of Harper's Monthly, Henry D. Thoreau, the poet
naturalist, Amos Bronson Alcott, the transcendental dreamer and writer of
strange shadowy sayings, and Margaret Fuller, the most learned woman of her
age, were prominent members who removed to live on the farm. It is said that
Emerson, himself, never really lived there; but was a member and frequent
visitor, as were other prominent scholars of the same school. The project
was a failure. After five years. of experience, some of the houses were
destroyed by fire, the enterprise given up, and the membership scattered.
But the Brook
Farm served its purpose in literature by bringing together some of the best
intellects in America, engaging them for five years in a common course of
study, and stimulating a commerce of ideas. The breaking up of the community
was better, perhaps, than its success would have been. It dispersed and
scattered abroad the advanced thoughts of Emerson, and the doctrine of the
society into every profession. Instead of being confined to the little
paper, The Dial, (which was the organ of the society) its literature
was transferred into a number of widely circulated national mediums.
Thus, it will be
seen how Emerson, the Sage of Concord, gathered around him and
dominated, by his charming personality, his powerful mind, and his wholesome
influence, some of the brightest minds that have figured in American
literature; and how, through them, as well as his own writings, he has done
so much, not only to lay the foundation of a new literature, but to mould
and shape leading minds for generations to come. The Brook Farm idea was the
uppermost thought in Edward Bellamy's famous novel, Looking Backward
which created such a sensation in the reading world a few years since. The
progressive thought of Emerson was father to the so-called New Theology,
or Higher Criticism, of modern scholars and theologians. It is,
perhaps, for the influence which Emerson has exerted, rather than his own
works, that the literature of America is mostly indebted to him. It was
through his efforts that the village of Concord has been made more famous in
American letters than the city of New York.
The charm of
Emerson's personality has already been referred to,
—and
it is not strange that it should have been so great. His manhood, no less
than his genius was worthy of admiration and of reverence. His life
corresponded with his brave; cheerful and steadfast teachings. He 'practiced
what he preached.' His manners were so gentle, his nature so transparent,
and his life so singularly pure and happy, that he was called, while he
lived, 'the good and great Emerson;' and, since his death, the memory of his
life and manly example are among the cherished possessions of our
literature.
The reverence of
his literary associates was little less than worship. Amos Bronson Alcott,—father
of the authoress, Louisa M. Alcott—one
of the Brook Farm members, though himself a profound scholar and several
years Emerson's senior, declared that it would have been his great
misfortune to have lived without knowing Emerson, whom he styled, 'The magic
minstrel and speaker! whose rhetoric, voiced as by organ stops, delivers the
sentiment from his breast in cadences peculiar to himself; now hurling it
forth on the ear, echoing them; then,—as
his mood and matter invite it—dying
like:
Music of mild lutes
Or silver coated flutes.
Source: The Literature of America and Our Favorite Authors, Birdsall &
Jones, p.71
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