Episode 16: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Part 1 idealinthewest.com /episode-16-ralph-waldo-emerson-part-1 Stream Audio I think it’s safe to say that when most people consider Ralph Waldo Emerson, they think of a rather avuncular producer of pithy quotes in an archaic style of writing. Although his words still pop up with fair frequency, especially now given the presence of online quotation catalogs, I also think it’s safe to say that most people know little of Emerson’s life, or his deep connection with and expression of the Ideal.¹ He is usually labelled a Transcendentalist², along with Thoreau and others of his circle, but he never warmed to that slightly condescending term. As he said in his lecture entitled The Transcendentalist, “The first thing we have to say respecting what are called ‘new views’ here in New England, at the present time, is, that they are not new, but the very oldest of thoughts cast into the mould of these new times…. What is popularly called Transcendentalism among us, is Idealism; Idealism as it appears in 1842.”³ He was very aware of the tradition we have been considering, and considered himself a humble bearer of it. Emerson was born in Boston in 1803, to a respectable Congregationalist minister, William Emerson and his wife Ruth Haskins Emerson. He was the third of what would be six sons, Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) and expectations for him were never very high. His father died when he was eight, and the genteelness of their poverty was thus taken away; the family was now just poor. But education and the life of the mind were still valued highly, and Waldo and his brothers would take turns attending the Boston Latin School, and being tutored by a remarkable collection of mostly women–family friends and relatives. The chief among these influences was his father’s sister, Mary Moody Emerson, who Robert Richardson says “was an American Jakob Boehme. Her everyday life was spent wrestling with angels.” 4 She would write, visit, and be a presence in Waldo’s life until her death in 1863. Waldo was accepted into Harvard at the age of fourteen and was able to attend by dint of a scholarship, working, and the support of his brother William. In his junior year he began to keep a journal, which he would continue to do almost to the end of his life. It soon became a repository for his deepest thoughts and his growing sense of the presence in his life of what he would later call “The Over-Soul.” In it he is writing to himself for himself about himself. On December 21 1823 he writes, “I say to the Universe, Mighty one! thou art not my mother; return to chaos if thou wilt, I shall still exist. I live. If I owe my being, it is to a destiny greater than thine. Star by star, world by world, system by system shall be crushed–but I shall live.”5 Waldo graduated in the middle of his class, still unsure of his vocation. His two older brothers had become teachers; he followed suit, and their pooled resources greatly helped the family’s financial outlook. But he was still not satisfied. Just before turning twenty-one, he notes in his journal “I burn after the ‘aliquid imensum infinitumque’ (“something great and immeasurable”) which Cicero desired.” (April 18, 1824) While continuing to teach, Waldo returned to Harvard Divinity School and emerged “approbated to preach,” in 1826. He had already established a reputation as a speaker by filling in various pulpits in New England, but he still suffered from what might be called an existential crisis: “My years are passing away. Infirmities are already stealing on me that may be the deadly enemies that are to dissolve me to dirt and little is yet done to establish my consideration among my contemporaries & less to get a memory when I am gone.” (March 27, 1826) He was also suffering from physical ill health, and the following winter he made a trip to Florida to help recover. 1/4