Emerson, Ralph
Waldo Born May 25, 1803, in Boston, Massachusetts,
United States; died of complications resulting
from pneumonia, April 27, 1882, in Concord,
Massachusetts, United States; son of William
(minister of a liberal Congregationalist [later
Unitarian] parish) and Ruth (Haskins) Emerson;
married Ellen Louisa Tucker, September 30, 1829
(died of tuberculosis, c. 1831); married Lydia
Jackson, September 14, 1835; children: (second
marriage) Waldo (died of scarlatina in 1842),
Ellen, Edith, Edward.
A founder of
the Transcendental movement and the founder of a
distinctly American philosophy emphasizing
optimism, individuality, and mysticism, Emerson
was one of the most influential literary figures
of the nineteenth century. Raised to be a minister
in Puritan New England, Emerson sought to "create
all things new" with a philosophy stressing the
recognition of God Immanent, the presence of
ongoing creation and revelation by a god apparent
in all things and who exists within everyone. Also
crucial to Emerson's thought is the related
Eastern concept of the essential unity of all
thoughts, persons, and things in the divine whole.
Traditional values of right and wrong, good and
evil, appear in his work as necessary opposites,
evidencing the effect of German philosopher G. W.
F. Hegel's system of dialectical metaphysics.
Emerson's works also emphasize individualism and
each person's quest to break free from the
trappings of the illusory world (maya) in order to
discover the godliness of the inner Self.
BIOGRAPHY:
The son of a Unitarian
minister, Emerson spent a sheltered childhood in
Boston. During his youth the publications of the
German Higher Critics and their progeny, as well
as translations of Hindu and Buddhist poetry, were
causing controversy in American academic circles.
Emerson's class at Harvard Divinity School was
affected by these influences; consequently, upon
assuming the pastorate of a Boston church in 1829,
Emerson experienced many doubts concerning
traditional Christian belief. He resigned from his
pulpit in 1832, moved to nearby Concord, and then
spent the next few years studying and traveling in
Europe. After visiting a Paris botanical
exhibition, Emerson resolved to be, as he termed
it, a "naturalist." Upon returning to the United
States, he began his career as a lecturer in the
country's new lyceum movement. During the late
1830s and early 1840s, Emerson published the works
that present his thought at its most idealistic
and optimistic. The lyrical essay Nature (1836), a
pamphlet repudiating both materialism and
conventional religion, declares nature the divine
example for inspiration and the source of
boundless possibilities for humanity's
fulfillment. The American Scholar, an address
delivered before Harvard's Phi Beta Kappa Society
in 1837, attacks American dependence on European
thought and urges the creation of a new literary
heritage. Emerson's Divinity School Address,
delivered at Harvard in 1838, caused tremendous
controversy for renouncing the tenets of
historical Christianity and defining
Transcendental philosophy in terms of the "impersoneity"
of God. The doctrines formulated in these three
works were later expanded and elaborated upon in
his Essays (1841) and Essays: Second Series
(1844), of which "Self-Reliance," "The Over-Soul,"
and "The Poet" are among the best-known.
Emerson became identified
with the Transcendental movement in the 1840s,
serving as its spokesperson, and as founder and
guiding force of that group's quarterly
periodical, the Dial. Conceived as "a medium for
the freest expression of thought on the questions
which interest earnest minds in every community,"
the Dial was published for a small readership from
1840 to 1844, when it folded. Introducing the
public to the writings of Amos Bronson Alcott,
Margaret Fuller, and Henry David Thoreau, a group
who shared Emerson's philosophy, the journal also
published Emerson's first poems. The merits of his
poetry, collected in Poems (1847) and May-Day, and
Other Pieces (1867), are subject to much critical
debate. Prominent among them are "The Rhodora,"
"The Sphinx," "Brahma," "The Humble-Bee," and
"Threnody." But the poem best known to the
American public is one of his earliest works, the
"Concord Hymn," which celebrates "the shot heard
round the world" of the Battle of Concord, during
the American Revolution.
Emerson's poetry written
from the era of the Dial onward, as well as his
prose works dating from Essays: Second Series,
chart a steady decline in the author's idealism
and give rise to an emerging recognition of mortal
limitations. The Conduct of Life (1860) perhaps
best expresses his humanistic acquiescence to the
reality of worldly circumstances. Other important
later works include Representative Men: Seven
Lectures (1850), a series of essays on the men who
most closely fit Emerson's ideals--including
Plato, Napoleon, and Shakespeare--and English
Traits (1856), a work hailed by his friend Thomas
Carlyle as an accurate portrait of English social
manners in the midVictorian era. Society and
Solitude (1870) marks the beginning of Emerson's
decline as an essayist. He spent his last years in
Concord, writing little, but recognized throughout
America as a philosopher of great stature.
Many American authors,
including Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Emily
Dickinson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Thoreau are
indebted to Emerson's thought. While some critics
find in him the eternal naif, a writer of
pleasant-sounding but ultimately impractical
essays, containing ideals that stale with the age
of Emerson's works, others note his energizing
influence on inquisitive minds as evidence of his
lasting greatness.
WRITINGS:
·
Nature (essay), Munroe (Boston), 1836.
· (Editor and author of preface) Thomas Carlyle,
Sartor Resartus, Munroe, 1836.
· An Oration, Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa
Society, at Cambridge, August 31, 1837 (lecture),
Munroe, 1837, also published as Man Thinking,
1844, also known as
The American Scholar.
· An Address Delivered before the Senior Class in
Divinity College, Cambridge, Sunday Evening, 15
July 1838 (lecture), Munroe, 1838, also called
The Divinity School Address.
·
Nature: An Essay, and Lectures on the
Times, Clarke (London), 1844.
· Orations,
Lectures, and
Addresses, Clarke, 1844.
·
Essays (first series), Munroe, 1841,
enlarged edition, 1847.
·
Essays: Second Series, Munroe, 1844.
· Poems, Munroe, 1847, enlarged and revised,
Houghton, 1884, revised again, Houghton, 1904,
also published in enlarged and revised edition as
Selected Poems, 1876.
·
Nature:
Addresses and
Lectures (lectures), Munroe, 1849, also
published as Miscellanies: Embracing
Nature,
Addresses, and
Lectures, Phillips, Sampson (Boston),
1856, also published as Miscellanies, Macmillan,
1884.
·
Representative Men: Seven Lectures (lectures),
Phillips, Sampson, 1850.
· (Written and edited with William Henry Channing
and James Freeman Clarke) Memoirs of Margaret
Fuller Ossoli, two volumes, Phillips, Sampson,
1852, issued in three volumes, Bentley (London),
1852.
·
English Traits (travel essays), Phillips,
Sampson, 1856.
·
The Conduct of Life (essays), Ticknor and
Fields (Boston), 1860.
· May-Day and Other Pieces (poetry and essays),
Ticknor and Fields, 1867.
·
Society and Solitude, Twelve Chapters
(essays), Fields, Osgood (Boston), 1870.
· (Editor) Parnassus, Osgood, 1875.
· Letters and Social Aims, Osgood, 1876.
· Emerson's Complete Works, twelve volumes,
Houghton, 1883-1893.
· The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph
Waldo Emerson 1834-1872, two volumes, edited by
Charles Eliot Norton, Osgood, 1883.
· Miscellanies, Houghton, 1884.
· Lectures and Biographical Sketches, Houghton,
1884.
· Natural History of Intellect and Other Papers
(essays), Houghton, 1893.
· Two Unpublished Essays: The Character of
Socrates; The Present State of Ethical Philosophy,
Lamson, Wolffe, 1896.
· A Correspondence between John Sterling and Ralph
Waldo Emerson, edited by Edward Waldo Emerson,
Houghton, 1897.
· Letters from Ralph Waldo Emerson to a Friend,
1838-1853 [Samuel Gray Ward], edited by Charles
Eliot Norton, Houghton, 1899.
· Correspondence between Ralph Waldo Emerson and
Herman Grimm, edited by Frederick William Holls,
Houghton, 1903.
· The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson
(essays, lectures, travel essays, and poetry),
twelve volumes, Houghton, 1903- 1904.
· The Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson (journals),
ten volumes, edited by Edward Waldo Emerson and
Waldo Emerson Forbes, Houghton, 1909-1914.
· Records of a Lifelong Friendship, 1807-1882:
Ralph Waldo Emerson and William Henry Furness,
edited by Horace Howard Furness, Houghton, 1910.
· Uncollected Writings: Essays, Addresses, Poems,
Reviews and Letters, Lamb, 1912.
· Emerson-Clough Letters, edited by Howard F.
Lowry and Ralph Leslie Rusk, Rowfant Club
(Cleveland), 1934.
· Young Emerson Speaks: Unpublished Discourses on
Many Subjects, edited by Arthur Cushman McGiffert,
Jr., Houghton, 1938.
· The Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson, six volumes,
edited by Ralph Leslie Rusk, 1939.
· The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson,
volume one, edited by Stephen E. Whicher and
Robert E. Spiller, Harvard University Press, 1959,
volume two, edited by Whicher, Spiller, and
Wallace E. Williams, Harvard University Press,
1964, volume three, edited by Spiller and
Williams, Harvard University Press, 1972.
· The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of
Ralph Waldo Emerson, sixteen volumes, edited by
William H. Gilman and others, Harvard University
Press, 1960-1983.
· One First Love: The Letters of Ellen Louisa
Tucker to Ralph Waldo Emerson, edited by Edith W.
Gregg, Harvard University Press, 1962.
· The Correspondence of Emerson and Carlyle,
edited by Joseph Slater, Columbia University
Press, 1964.
· The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson,
edited by Alfred R. Ferguson and others, Harvard
University Press, 1971.
· The Poetry Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson,
edited by Ralph H. Orth and others, University of
Missouri Press, 1986.
Credit and source: Camden
County Free Library (Vorhees, NJ)