
Ralph Waldo Emerson, philosopher and seer : $b an estimate of his character and genius in prose and verse
"Ralph Waldo Emerson, philosopher and seer : an estimate of his character and…" by A. Bronson Alcott is a literary appreciation and memorial volume written in the late 19th century. Blending essay, biography, and commemorative verse, it offers a close, admiring portrait of Emerson’s mind and manners while reflecting on his influence in American letters and culture. The likely topic is Emerson’s character, genius, and artistic method, as seen by an intimate friend and fellow thinker. At its heart is a long essay that presents Emerson as a rhapsodist—an inspired poet-moralist whose lectures and prose moved audiences through cadence, image, and ethical insight. Alcott praises Emerson’s originality, his shaping of the Lyceum, and his American voice; contrasts his temperate charity with Carlyle’s harsher polemic; and sketches his Concord life, country walks, and mosaic method of composition. The book then turns elegiac: a lyrical monody, naming Emerson “Ion,” mourns his passing while evoking the landscapes and friendships (with veiled nods to Thoreau) that nourished his song; and an ode by F. B. Sanborn places the poet-sage among the ancients, affirming the enduring music of his thought. Framed by a publishers’ preface and personal notes, the collection reads as a warm, authoritative tribute from those who knew him best.
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