Essays: First Series
Essays: First Series is a series of essays written by Ralph Waldo Emerson, published in 1841, concerning transcendentalism.
Essays
The book contains:
- "History"
- "Self-Reliance"
- "Compensation"
- "Spiritual Laws"
- "Love"
- "Friendship"
- "Prudence"
- "Heroism"
- "The Over-Soul"
- "Circles"
- "Intellect"
- "Art"
Reception
Many noted the influence of Thomas Carlyle. An anonymous English reviewer voiced the mainstream view when he wrote that the author of the book "out-Carlyles Carlyle himself," "imitat[ing] his inflations, his verbiage, his Germanico-Kantian abstractions, his metaphysics and mysticism."[1] Jane Welsh Carlyle agreed, giving her impression in a letter to John Sterling: "I find him getting affected, stilted, mystical, and in short 'a considerable of a bore' A bad immitation [sic] of Carlyle's most Carlylish translations of Goethes [sic] most Goetheish passages!"[2] For his part, Sterling described them to William Coningham as "the only book of any pith and significance that has dawned here lately . . . which at a glance, seem far ahead in compass and brilliancy of almost everything England has of late years (generations) produced".[3]
See also
References
- Myerson, Joel, ed. (1992). "Emerson's Essays". Emerson and Thoreau: The Contemporary Reviews. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 95.
- "JWC TO JOHN STERLING, 29 April 1841". The Collected Letters of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle. Vol. 13. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 122.
- "20 June 1841". Sterling's Letters to Coningham. 1872. p. 22.
External links
- Essays: First Series at Google Books.
- Essays First Series public domain audiobook at LibriVox