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Emerson's Essays

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About the Author

Life and Background
Chronology of Emerson’s Life

Nature

Introduction to the Essay
The Introduction
Chapter 1. Nature
Chapter II. Commodity
Chapter III. Beauty
Chapter IV. Language
Chapter V. Discipline
Chapter VI. Idealism
Chapter VII. Spirit
Chapter VIII. Prospects
Glossary

“The American Scholar”

Introduction to the Essay
Paragraphs 1-7. “Man Thinking.”
Paragraphs 8 and 9. The Influence of Nature.
Paragraphs 10-20. The Influence of the Past.
Paragraphs 21-30. The Influence of Action.
Paragraphs 31-45. The Scholar’s Duties.
Glossary

“The Over-Soul”

Introduction to the Essay
Paragraphs 1-3. Introduction.
Paragraphs 4-10. The Over-Soul Is Defined.
Paragraphs 11-15. The Soul and Society.
Paragraphs 16-21. Revelation.
Paragraphs 22-30. The Soul and the Individual.
Glossary

“Self-Reliance”

Introduction to the Essay
Paragraphs 1-17. The Importance of Self-Reliance.
Paragraphs 18-32. Self-Reliance and the Individual.
Paragraphs 33-50. Self-Reliance and Society.
Glossary

“The Trancendentalist”

Introduction to the Essay
Paragraphs 1-5. Materialism versus Idealism.
Paragraphs 6-14. Examples and Shortcomings of Transcendentalism.
Paragraphs 15-30. The Solitary Transcendentalist.
Glossary

“The Poet”

Introduction to the Essay
Paragraphs 1-9. The Poet as Interpreter.
Paragraphs 10-18. The Poet, Language, and Nature.
Paragraphs 19-29. The Poet and Imagination.
Paragraphs 30-33. The Poet and America.
Glossary

Critical Essays

Trancendentalism
Emerson, Unitarianism, and the God Within
Emerson’s Use of Metaphor

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Nature

Chapter VII. Spirit

Attempting to penetrate the mystery of nature’s vital unity, Emerson’s language and concepts concerning a universal spirituality suggest mystical truths beyond the reach of ordinary understanding. Whenever we try to define what this spirit is that permeates nature, our comprehension fails us, but we still feel that nature has spiritual properties. Although our critical understanding of nature’s spirit can only be meager or superficial, this ignorance does not diminish the importance or the recognition of the mystery.

Emerson addresses three questions: First, what is the matter out of which nature is made? In answering this question, he finds that according to the philosophy of idealism, matter is a phenomenon and not a substance. Nature is something experienced, something distinctly different from ourselves. And yet, given his earlier statements concerning our foisting onto nature what we want it to be, Emerson admits that nature is permeated by the human emotions we accord it. Ironically, this conclusion means that nature as a thing in itself ultimately remains alien to us.

Addressing the next two questions—Where did the matter that is nature come from? Toward what end did it come?—Emerson asserts that nature’s animating spirit expresses itself through us. The highest truth is that a universal essence is present in each and every object, including humans. This essence—or spirit—is the life force responsible for the continuous creation going on all around us: It creates the unity and indivisibility of nature, spirit, and humanity. But readers will recall Emerson’s warning in the introduction, “We are now so far from the road to truth.” The imbalance that alienates us from nature is what he is trying to make us aware of.


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