Ralph Waldo Emerson
Famous as | American Lecturer, Philosopher, Essayist & Poet |
Born on | 25 May 1803 |
Born in | Boston, Massachusetts |
Died on | 27 April 1882 |
Nationality | United States |
Works & Achievements | One of the founders of Transcendentalism, delivered around 1500 public lectures during life time. Society and Solitude, Letters and Social Aims, Nature |
Ralph Waldo Emerson Childhood & Early Life
Ralph Waldo Emerson was born in Boston, Massachusetts on May 25,
1803. His father,William Emerson was a Unitarian minister and his mother
was Ruth Haskins. His three siblings, namely Phebe, John Clarke, and
Mary Caroline, died in childhood. His other four brothers who survived
to adulthood were William, Edward, Robert Bulkeley and Charles. When
Emerson was only eight years old, his father died due to stomach cancer.
At the age of nine, he joined Boston Latin School in 1812. Emerson took
admission in Harvard College in October 1817 and was appointed as the
freshman messenger for the president. He had to take various other part time
jobs like of a waiter and occasional teacher to cover his school
expenses. He completed his graduation from Harvard on August 29, 1821 at
the age of eighteen. Due to his health problems, Emerson had to look
for warmer climates and as such, traveled to Charleston, South Carolina
and then further to St. Augustine, Florida. In St. Augustine, he was
befriended with Prince Achille Murat, the nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Murat and Emerson became close friends and enjoyed discussions on
religion, society, philosophy, and government. According to Emerson,
Murat had a major influence on his intellectual education.
Career
After his education from Harvard, Emerson assisted his brother
William in a school for young women. After his brother left for
Göttingen to study divinity, he took the charge of the school. Once
Emerson too worked as a schoolmaster for several years, he went to
Harvard Divinity School. He was ordained as junior pastor at Boston’s
Second Church on January 11, 1829 and was given an initial salary of
$1,200 a year. During this time, he also held other responsibilities
like a chaplain to the Massachusetts legislature, and a member of the
Boston school committee. His wife’s death on February 8, 1831 deeply
affected Emerson and he started having disagreements regarding church’s
methods. He finally resigned in 1832 over his disagreements with church
officials.
In 1832, Emerson traveled Europe and had written his travel
accounts in “English Traits” (1857). In his European trip, he went to
different parts of Europe such as Italy, Rome, Florence, Venice,
Switzerland and Paris. When he moved north to England, he met William
Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Thomas Carlyle. Emerson was
strongly influenced by Carlyle and the two remained good friends for
life. On returning back to America in 1833, Emerson started living with
his mother in Newton, Massachusetts but later shifted to Concord,
Massachusetts. Witnessing the Lyceum movement, Emerson found a budding
career as a lecturer. He gave his first lecture on November 5, 1833
discussing about “Uses of Natural History in Boston". Very soon he
became one of the most influential people in the town. On September 12,
1835 which was the 200th anniversary of the town of Concord, Emerson was
asked to give a lecture on the commemoration ceremony.
Later Life
On September 8, 1836 Emerson together with Henry Hedge, George
Putnam and George Ripley led the foundation of Transcendentalism. The
first official meeting of this Transcendental Club was held on September
19, 1836. The same year, Emerson had anonymously published his first
essay, “Nature”. A year later, in 1837, he delivered his now-famous Phi
Beta Kappa address, “The American Scholar”, which was then known as “An
Oration, Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge”. The
sermon was later renamed for a collection of essays in 1849. In the
March of 1837, Emerson gave a series of lectures on “The Philosophy of
History at Boston's Masonic Temple”. This marked the beginning of his
serious career as a lecturer. Emerson earned great profits from the
lecture and eventually, continued to manage his own lectures. With time,
Emereson gave as many as 80 lectures a year, traveling across the
northern part of the United States. He traveled as far as St. Louis, Des
Moines, Minneapolis, and California.
In July 1840, Transcendental Club published its first flagship
journal, “The Dial”. George Ripley was the managing editor of the
journal, whereas Margaret Fuller was its first editor whom Emerson had
selected himself. In the subsequent year, he published “Essays”, his
second book and first of the series, which included the famous essay,
“Self-Reliance”. Emerson then penned the poem “Threnody” and the essay
“Experience” in 1842. Two year later, in April 1844, the publication of
“The Dial”, however, stopped. The same year, Emerson published his
second collection of essays, “Essays: Second Series” which included his
famous works like “The Poet”, “Experience”, and “Gifts”. By the year
1845, he also came in contact with Indian philosophy by the works of
French philosopher Victor Cousin. He read Bhagavad Gita and Henry Thomas
Colebrooke's Essays on the Vedas and was strongly influenced by Vedas.
After the death of his friend Margaret Fuller in 1850, Emerson,
along with James Freeman Clarke and William Henry Channing, took the
task of editing her letters and works to compile her biography. The
biography was published with the title “The Memoirs of Margaret Fuller
Ossoli” and became the best selling biography of the decade. “The
Conduct Of Life” was released in 1960. His final original collection of
essays, this book dealt with some of the hottest issues
that were in rage at that time. In January 1862, Emerson visited
Washington D.C. and gave a lecture at the Smithsonian on January 31. The
next day he met Abraham Lincoln at White House. Lincoln had seen his
works previously and had liked them. Emerson always wanted the immediate
emancipation of the slaves, but expressed his anti-slavery views only
during the time of civil war. His
family members and friends were always against slavery and worked as
active abolitionists. In the later years of his life, Emerson also
became one of the active abolitionists of slavery.
Personal Life
On the Christmas Day of 1827, Emerson met his first wife Ellen
Louisa Tucker, for the first time in Concord, New Hampshire. She was
only 18 when the two got married in 1829. After the marriage,
Emerson moved to Boston with his wife and mother. In a short time of
two years, his wife died on February 8, 1831. Her death deeply moved him
and he used to visit her grave daily. On September 14, 1835, Emerson
married to Lydia Jackson in her hometown of Plymouth, Massachusetts. The
couple had four children namely Waldo, Ellen, Edith, and Edward Waldo
Emerson.
Death
Emerson’s health started to decline with year 1867 and his
condition worsened by the spring of 1872 when he showed problems with
memory and suffered from aphasia. It was said that by the end of the
decade, there were a number of times, when Emerson actually forgot his
own name. After getting drenched in a sudden rain shower in the cold
night of April 19, 1882, he caught pneumonia. Emerson died on April 27,
1882 and was buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Massachusetts.
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Timeline: | ||||
1803: Emerson was born in Boston, Massachusetts.
1821: graduated from Harvard College.
1825: Went to Harvard Divinity School.
1829: Ordained as a junior pastor of Boston’s Second Church
1829: Married first wife, Ellen Louisa Tucker.
1831: His wife Ellen died.
1832: Set out on a European tour.
1833: Gave his first public lecture.
1835: Remarried to Lydia Jackson.
1836: Published “Nature”, Led the foundation of “Transcendental Club”
1837: Delivered his now-famous Phi Beta Kappa
address, “The American Scholar”, befriended Henry David Thoreau,
beginning of his career as a lecturer
1841: Published “Essays”, his second book.
1842: Releasedthe poem “Threnody” and the essay “Experience” in the memory of his dead son.
1844: Published his second collection of essays, “Essays: Second Series”.
1857: Wrote “English Traits”
1860: Published “The Conduct of Life”, his final original collection of essays.
1862: Visited Washington D.C. and gave a lecture at the Smithsonian
1882: Died in Concord, Massachusetts.
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