Ralph Waldo Emerson
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
"It is overgrown with tares and poisons. Suffer no longer this noisesome barrenness. Harrow it up with thoughts. Fill it with the joys and wholesome apprehensions of a reasonable being, instead of the indifference of a brute."--Ralph Waldo Emerson "The Bible of the learned for twenty-two hundred years, every brisk young man who says in succession fine things to each reluctant generation,- Boethius, Rabelais, Erasmus, Bruno, Locke, Rousseau, Alfieri, Coleridge,- is some reader of Plato, translating into the vernacular, wittily, his good things."--"Plato; or, the Philosopher" by Emerson |
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Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 – 1882) was an American essayist, lecturer, and poet who led the transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th century. He was seen as a champion of individualism and a prescient critic of the countervailing pressures of society, and he disseminated his thoughts through dozens of published essays and more than 1,500 public lectures across the United States.
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". Following this 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".
Emerson wrote most of his important essays as lectures first and then revised them for print. His first two collections of essays, Essays: First Series (1841) and Essays: Second Series (1844), represent the core of his thinking. They include the well-known essays "Self-Reliance", "The Over-Soul", "Circles", "The Poet" and "Experience". Together with "Nature", these essays made the decade from the mid-1830s to the mid-1840s Emerson's most fertile period.
Emerson wrote on a number of subjects, never espousing fixed philosophical tenets, but developing certain ideas such as individuality, freedom, the ability for mankind to realize almost anything, and the relationship between the soul and the surrounding world. Emerson's "nature" was more philosophical than naturalistic: "Philosophically considered, the universe is composed of Nature and the Soul". Emerson is one of several figures who "took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world."
He remains among the linchpins of the American romantic movement, Emerson is also well known as a mentor and friend of Henry David Thoreau, a fellow transcendentalist.
Selected works
Collections
- Essays: First Series (1841)
- Essays: Second Series (1844)
- Poems (1847)
- Nature, Addresses and Lectures (1849)
- Representative Men (1850)
- English Traits (1856)
- The Conduct of Life (1860)
- May Day and Other Pieces (1867)
- Society and Solitude (1870)
- Letters and Social Aims (1875)
Individual essays
- "Nature" (1836)
- "Self-Reliance" (Essays: First Series)
- "Compensation" (First Series)
- "The Over-Soul" (First Series)
- "Circles" (First Series)
- "The Poet" (Essays: Second Series)
- "Experience" (Essays: Second Series)
- "Politics" (Second Series)
- ''Saadi'' in the Atlantic Monthly (1864)
- "The American Scholar"
- "New England Reformers"
Poems
- "Concord Hymn"
- "The Rhodora"
- "Brahma"
- "Uriel"
- "The Snow-Storm (poem)"
- "A Nation's Strength"
Letters
- Letter to Martin Van Buren
- The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834–72
See also
- American philosophy
- List of American philosophers
- Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door, a phrase often attributed to Emerson.
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