Emerson was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to the Rev. William Emerson, a Unitarian minister in a famous line of ministers. He gradually drifted from the doctrines of his peers, then formulated and first expressed the philosophy of Transcendentalism in his essay Nature. When he was three years old, Emerson's father complained that the child could not read well enough. He attended
Boston Latin School. In
1811, when Emerson was eight years old, his father died. In October
1817, at the age of 14, Emerson went to
Harvard University and was appointed President's Freshman, a position which gave him a room free of charge. He waited at Commons, which reduced the cost of his board to one quarter, and he received a scholarship. He added to his slender means by tutoring and by teaching during the winter vacations at his Uncle Ripley's school in
Waltham, Massachusetts.
After Emerson graduated from Harvard in
1821, he assisted his brother in a school for young ladies established in their mother's house; 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, and emerged as a Unitarian minister in 1829. A dispute with church officials over the administration of the Communion service, and misgivings about public prayer led to his resignation in
1832. His young wife, Ellen Louisa Tucker, died in April
1831.
Ralph Waldo Emerson is distantly related to
Charles Wesley Emerson, founder and namesake of
Emerson College. Both were Unitarian ministers; Charles was a family name in Ralph Waldo Emerson's family. Their great ancestor, Thomas Emerson, immigrant, settled as early as 1640 in Ipswich, Massachusetts, and was the progenitor of a family of ministers and learned men.
His travels to Europe (three travels) were not to England only; he also visited France (in 1848), Italy, and the Middle East.
In
1835, Emerson bought a house on the Cambridge Turnpike, in
Concord, Massachusetts. He quickly became one of the leading citizens in the town. He also married his second wife
Lydia Jackson there. He called her Lidian and she called him Mr Emerson. Their children were Waldo, Ellen, Edith and Edward Waldo Emerson. Ellen was named for his first wife, at the suggestion of Lidian.
Literary careerIn September
1836, Emerson and other like-minded intellectuals founded the
Transcendental Club, which served as a center for the movement, but didn't publish its journal
The Dial, until July
1840. Emerson published his first essay,
Nature, anonymously in September 1836. While it became the foundation for
Transcendentalism, many people at the time assumed it to be a work of
Swedenborgianism.
In
1838 he was invited back to
Divinity Hall, Harvard Divinity School, for the school's graduation address, which came to be known as his
Divinity School Address. His remarks managed to outrage the establishment and shock the whole
Protestant community at the time, as he proclaimed that while
Jesus was a great man, he was not
God. For this, he was denounced as an
atheist, and a poisoner of young men's minds. Despite the roar of his critics, he made no reply, leaving it to others for his defense. He was not invited back to speak at Harvard for another 40 years, but by the mid-
1880s his position had become standard
Unitarian doctrine.
Emerson made a living as a popular lecturer in
New England and the rest of the country outside of the
South. During several scheduled appearances that he was not able to make,
Frederick Douglass took his place. Emerson spoke on a wide variety of subjects. Many of his essays grew out of his lectures.
Emerson associated closely with
Nathaniel Hawthorne and
Henry David Thoreau and often took walks with them in Concord. Emerson encouraged Thoreau's talent and early career. The land on which Thoreau built his cabin on
Walden Pond belonged to Emerson. While Thoreau was living at Walden, Emerson provided food and hired Thoreau to perform odd jobs. When Thoreau left Walden after two years' time, it was to live at the Emerson house while Emerson was away on a lecture tour. Their close relationship fractured after Emerson gave Thoreau the poor advice to publish his first book,
A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, without extensive drafts, and directed Thoreau to his own agent who made Thoreau split the price/risk of publishing. The book found few readers, and put Thoreau heavily into debt. Eventually the two would reconcile some of their differences, although Thoreau privately accused Emerson of having drifted from his original philosophy, and Emerson began to view Thoreau as a
misanthrope. Emerson's eulogy to Thoreau is largely credited with the latter's negative reputation during the
19th century.
Emerson was noted as being a very abstract and difficult writer who nevertheless drew large crowds for his speeches. The heart of Emerson's writing was his direct observations in his journals, which he started keeping as a teenager at Harvard. The journals were elaborately indexed by Emerson. Emerson went back to his journals, his bank of experiences and ideas, and took out relevant passages, which were joined together in his dense, concentrated lectures. He later revised and polished his lectures for his essays and sermons.
He was considered one of the great
orators of the time, a man who could enrapture crowds with his deep voice, his enthusiasm, and his egalitarian respect for his audience. His outspoken, uncompromising support for
abolitionism later in life caused protest and jeers from crowds when he spoke on the subject. He continued to speak on abolition without concern for his popularity and with increasing
radicalism. He attempted, with difficulty, not to join the public arena as a member of any group or movement, and always retained a stringent independence that reflected his
individualism. He always insisted that he wanted no followers, but sought to give man back to himself, as a self-reliant individual. Asked to sum up his work late in life, he said it was his doctrine of "the infinitude of the private man" that remained central.
In
1845, Emerson's Journal records that he was reading the
Bhagavad Gita and
Henry Thomas Colebrooke's
Essays on the Vedas.[1] 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.[2]
Emerson was strongly influenced by his early reading of the
French essayist
Montaigne. From those compositions he took the conversational, subjective style and the loss of belief in a personal God. He never read
Kant's works, but, instead, relied on
Coleridge's interpretation of the
German Transcendental Idealist. This led to Emerson's non-traditional ideas of
soul and
God.
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.
[3] The Emerson Chair is expected to be occupied in the fall of
2007 or soon thereafter.
Note: Source: Wikipedia