Discover Concord magazine Fall 2020

Page 42

SACRED INTEGRITY: BY KRISTI LYNN MARTIN, Ph.D.

declared, was a new and limitless, yet natural relation.1 Emerson intentionally made his Concord home into a geographical center for American Transcendentalism. The house was conveniently located on the Cambridge Turnpike, approximately twenty miles from Boston by road or train. There he authored his works and gathered other original voices. The Emerson family hosted meetings and lectures, welcoming thinkers, activists, and enthusiasts as guests and intimates. Close to the intellectual stimulation of the city, but rural enough to evoke pastoral imaginings, Emerson sought to form a community of romantic writers and thinkers Emerson House in Concord. He invited the Alcotts, Hawthornes, Margaret Fuller, and Thoreau, among others, to reside with him or settle nearby in living situations he facilitated with his connections and income. Located down the road from Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House, where Little Women was written, and across the street from the Concord Museum, the simple,

yet refined and stately Emerson house is now a not-for-profit museum with an extensive collection of original artifacts, managed by the Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association. Emerson’s life offers us an example of principled living and generosity of spirit; his words remind us of our oneness with nature, of revolutionary impulse, and the sacred integrity of our own minds. ——————————————————————— Kristi Lynn Martin, Ph.D., is an independent scholar. As a public history and museum professional, she has worked with all of Concord’s literary-historical sites, including The Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial House.

Recommended for further reading: Robert D. Richardson, Jr., Emerson: The Mind on Fire (University of California Press, 1995). 1”

Self-Reliance”, Essay [First Series] (1841). “The American Scholar” was delivered in 1837 and “Divinity School Address” in 1838.

40

Discover CONCORD

| Fall 2020

Photos from commons.wikimedia.org

R

Ralph Waldo Emerson was not the originator of the romantic ideals known as Transcendentalism. Nor was his premier essay, Nature (1836), the first publication to set forth the philosophy. Emerson was, rather, the most successful public voice of New England Transcendentalism in the nineteenth century. Dissatisfied with his traditional ministry, Emerson embarked on an untried profession as a lecturer, essayist, and poet; gaining an international reputation. His eloquent and provocative prose resonated with a young American republic yearning to define itself against the time-honored past. Emerson turned his personal search for meaning into a national paean for a self-actualized identity. Nature was closely followed by his controversial “American Scholar,” “Divinity School Address,” and iconic “Self-Reliance.” Preaching the divinity of nature, intuitive truth, and the sacredness of the individual mind, Emerson led a revolution in thought from his ancestral home-place in Concord, Massachusetts, itself steeped in legacies of “American Independence.” With his call, “Trust thyself … Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind,” Emerson transformed the esoteric mysticism of Transcendentalism into an accessible popular culture, philosophically reforming the relationship between the individual and society. “The power” of the intuitive individual who rises above conventional expectations, Emerson

Emerson & the Home of Transcendentalism


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Breathtaking AUTUMN IN CONCORD

1min
pages 62-63

Cocktails to Inspire a Night Out

1min
page 60

Barrow Bookstore Presents: Concord Trivia

3min
page 58

Preserving the Lessons of Mid-Century Modern Architecture

5min
pages 56-57

GRAVE INSULT: The Mysterious Case of the Traveling British Soldiers' Skulls

6min
pages 52-53

THE PEOPLE OF MUSKETAQUID: Concord's First Residents

6min
pages 48-49

Thoreau Farm: A Place Where Thoreau Guides the Discussion

4min
pages 46-47

On Conscience & Kittens: The Two Minds of Nathaniel Hawthorne

4min
pages 44-45

SACRED INTEGRITY: Emerson & the Home of Transcendentalism

2min
page 42

The Healing Power of Art

3min
pages 40-41

How Do You Concord?

3min
page 30

At the Frontier of Hope: Brister Freeman

5min
pages 26-27

Stories from the Battle Road

5min
pages 24-25

A Tightly Plastered & Shingled House: Thoreau's Cabin at Walden Pond

3min
page 22

Amos Bronson Alcott: Peddler of Ideas

6min
pages 20-21

Time to Fly

2min
page 18

Surrounded by History

6min
pages 16-17

Passing the Torch: A Big Change in West Concord

6min
pages 12-13

TOP Things to See & Do in Concord this Fall

3min
pages 10-11
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.