Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Ralph Emerson Essays - Lecturers, Transcendentalism, Mystics
  Ralph Emerson  Ralph Waldo Emerson "...was truly one of our great geniuses" even though he  may have a short biography (Hodgins 212). But as Emerson once said himself,    "Great geniuses have the shortest biographies." Emerson was also a major  leader of "the philosophical movement of Transcendentalism". (Encarta 1)    Transcendentalism was belief in a higher reality than that found everyday life  that a human can achieve. Biographical Information Emerson was born on May 25,    1803 in Boston, Massachusetts. His father died when he was young and his mother  was left with him and his four other siblings. At the age of 18 he graduated  from Harvard University and was a teacher for three years in Boston. Then in    1825 he entered Harvard Divinity School and preached for three years. At the age  of 29 he resigned for ministry, partly because of the death of his wife after  only 17 months of marriage. In 1835 he married Lydia Jackson and started to  lecture. Then in 1836, he helped to start the Transcendental Club. The    Transcendental Club was formed for authors that were part of this historical  movement. Emerson was a big part of this and practically initiated the entire  club. As we know he was already a major part of the movement and know got  himself involved more. Many people and ways of life throughout his career  including Neoplatonism, the Hindu religion, Plato and even his wife influenced    Emerson. He also inspired many Transcendentalists like Thoreau. Emerson didn't  win any major awards, but he did win the love and appreciation of his readers.    Literary Information Emerson wrote many genres of writing including poetry and  sermons, but his best writing is found in his essays. Even though he is noted  for his essays, he was also a strong force in poetry. Emerson was known for  presenting ideas in an expressive style. He wrote about numerous issues  including nature, society, conspiracy and freedom. After returning to America  after a visit to England, he wrote for the abolitionist cause, which was  eliminating slavery. Emerson used these ideas in his 1837 lecture "The    American Scholar," which he presented before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of    Harvard. In it he talked about Americans becoming more intelligently  independent. In a second address, commonly referred to as the "Address at    Divinity College," given in 1838 to the graduating class of Cambridge Divinity    College, brought about a problem because it attacked religion and pushed  independence. Some of Emerson's famous titles are "Essays", which was  published in 1844, Poems, which was published in 1847, "Nature: Addresses and    Lectures", 1849, and "Representative Men", 1850. In 1860, he published    "Conduct of Life", which was the first of his works to receive immediate  popularity. In these works you were able to see the influence Plato and    Neoplatonism had of him. "Plato was an ancient Greek philosopher. He developed  the notion of a higher reality that exists beyond the powers of human  comprehension. Plato explained that the idea of absolute goodness transcends  human description. Neoplantonism was a collective designation for the  philosophical and religious doctrines of a heterogeneous school of speculative  thinkers who sought to develop and synthesize the metaphysical ideas of Plato"  (Encarta). Ralph Waldo Emerson found motivation to write in anything he did,  whether it was visiting England, the Transcendental Movement or if it was  abolishing slavery. He didn't receive much fame during his lifetime, but after  he passed away in1882, he was remembered for all of his writing, not just one  good essay. "Emerson was the most important figure during the Romantic    Period" (Myerson 3). He left his mark on writing, especially the Romantic    Period.    Bibliography    "Emerson, Ralph Waldo." Microsoft Encarta. CD-ROM. 1998 ed. "Emerson,    Ralph Waldo." Lkd. Columbia University Homepage, at "ILT Web." *http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/acedemic/digitexts/emerson/bio_emerson.html  * Hodgins, Francis. ed. Adventures in American Literature. Orlando: Harcourt,    1989. Myerson, Joel. "Ralph Waldo Emerson." Grolier Encyclopedia. CD-ROM.    1993 ed.    
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